The life and times of Middlesex and England wicketkeeper-batsman John
'JT' Murray, one of the acknowledged greats of English post-war cricket.
Irresistibly cool, glamorous and apparently unapproachable, Murray was
Christopher Sandford's consuming hero at the time the author was
confined in an English seaside boarding school in the 60s. Twenty or
more years later, the two became friends. In 2017 Murray eventually
succumbed to a decade-long campaign and agreed to share in full his
lifetime's reminiscences, recounting his experiences of a quarter of a
century as a professional English sportsman. Murray proved unfailingly
generous and humorous (if by no means uncritical) in his accounts of the
great Tests, the tours and the parade of celebrities, sporting and
otherwise, he encountered. This treasure trove of stories - described
not just in the dry accountancy of scores and averages, but in droll
anecdotal detail - lies at the heart of a unique cricket book
illustrated by photographs, letters and notes from Murray's own
collection.