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Turning Over the Pebbles

A Life in Cricket and in the Mind

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Turning Over the Pebbles

De: Mike Brearley
Narrado por: Mike Brearley
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'If you carry on like this, you'll do nothing but play football and cricket all your life.'

These were the exasperated words of Mike Brearley's mother, as he once again trod mud into the family home after a long day playing outdoors. They were also an unwitting but half-accurate prediction, for Brearley would become one of the most successful sportsmen of his generation by playing cricket for Cambridge, Middlesex and then becoming one of England's finest captains. But for Brearley, cricket wasn't just a physical activity, it was also an intellectual game, offering the chance to bring closer together body and mind. When his cricketing career came to end - during his playing days he had had a hiatus as a philosophy lecturer - he eschewed sporting commentary for a career as a psychoanalyst.

In Turning Over the Pebbles, which he calls a 'memoir of the mind', Brearley reviews his life with its attendant emotions, tensions and moves. It is also a book of his second thoughts and reassessments, allowing him to understand more fully things that were obscure to him earlier. After all, he says, 'captaining ourselves, like captaining a team, requires a willingness to allow thoughts and feelings their space'.

Deeply thoughtful, erudite and elegantly framed, this book seamlessly blends all aspects of Brearley's life into a single integrated narrative. With wide-ranging meditations on sport, philosophy, literature, religion, leadership, psychoanalysis, music and more, Brearley delves into his private passions and candidly examines the various shifts, conflicts and triumphs of his extraordinary life and career, both on and off the field.

©2023 Mike Brearley (P)2023 Little Brown Book Group Limited
Críquet Deportes Psicología Deportiva Para reflexionar

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Not what I was expecting

Much as I had hoped to enjoy this (after all, the author was an excellent captain) I found it dreadfully dreary. "A Life in Cricket and in the Mind" had precious little in the way of cricket, and not a whole lot more in the mind, but a great deal of rambling on about assorted philosophers and psychoanalysts the author had encountered or found influential in his life. Devoid of any humour, and only a few memorable passages, it was a slog to get through. The narration was wooden and downbeat. I kept going, hoping to hear more about Mike's greatest achievements as a leader (eg the 1981 Ashes) but instead it ended, sadly, on a treatise about death and dying, and a sense that the author's reflections, even when positive, were laced with gloom.
We each have our different tastes in music and culture, but I sensed that Mr. Brearley's choices for Desert Island Discs, highbrow as they must have been, lack any sort of energy that would make one smile. And this book did not make me smile. Sorry, skipper, you got this one wrong.

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