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Our May publications are now available.

ACS Women's International Cricket Year Book 2025: First Edition, edited by Philip Bailey. Photo shows Amelia Kerr batting for New Zealand during their successful T20 World Cup campaign

The ACS is delighted to introduce the Women’s International Cricket Year Book – a sister volume to the ACS’s long-running International Cricket Year Book. As women’s cricket gains year by year in prominence and popularity, the Women’s International Cricket Year Book (supported by the trustees of Women’s Cricket Associates) offers worldwide coverage at both international and domestic level, and essential data in the form of player records and biographical details.

ACS International Cricket Year Book 2025: 40th Men's Edition, edited by Philip Bailey

The 40th edition of the International Cricket Year Book, now restricted to men, continues to provide detailed information about every current player in men’s cricket worldwide, including all those who appeared in a First-Class, List A Limited-Overs or Twenty20 match during 2023/24 and 2024, with basic biographical information, career details, plus statistics for the past season.

Until 30 June 2025, a discounted package of the Women’s International Cricket Year Book plus the Men’s International Cricket Year Book can be ordered at a combined price of £39, a saving of £4.

Cricket Tours No. 4: Brick by Brick - The Australian Cricketers in England, 1964, by Max Bonnell Photos show Fred Trueman leaving the field at The Oval after taking his 300th Test wicket; Ted Dexter, wearing a Conservative rosette, talking to a young woman while campaigning to be elected as an MP in Cardiff; Graham McKenzie and Grahame Corling posing with an umbrella at Old Trafford

In Brick by Brick, Max Bonnell explores the Australian tour of 1964, a pivotal year both for cricket and for Britain. A touring team derided as the weakest Australian side to visit England returned home five months later with the Ashes, after a damp and occasionally controversial series. Meanwhile, 13 years of Conservative government ended, after an election presented as a choice between a revitalised country and the class-ridden shackles of the past. Cricket, it seemed, stood at a similar crossroads, having abolished the distinction between amateurs and professionals, and introduced one-day professional cricket.

Lives in Cricket: David Walker, Norfolk's Master Batsman, by Andy Dawson. Photo shows David Walker as a young man in whites with his hands behind his back, standing in front of a single-storey building with thatched roof and leaded windows, and a bicycle propped up against the wall

David Walker, in his day the finest batsman England never had, is the subject of a biography by Andy Dawson. Sir Pelham Warner believed Walker would have opened for his country had he joined one of the first-class counties who invited him. Instead, he opted to play for his native Norfolk, topped their batting averages in seven of the nine seasons he played in the 1930s. He also captained Oxford University, led MCC in Ireland, toured Egypt with HM Martineau’s XI and, as master of cricket at Harrow, he oversaw its first victory over Eton in 31 years. Tragically, Walker was killed in 1942, aged just 28, during an RAF operation off the Norwegian coast.

The Cricket Statistician Issue No. 210 May 2025 £5.00 Photo is a close-up of the seam on a red cricket ball

The Cricket Statistician, edited by Jonathan Northall, is sent to members in their quarterly mailings, but extra copies and previous issues are available in the shop. The latest issue includes articles on 18th-century cricket and the stage, ‘the 1864 Experiment’ and reminiscences on Yorkshire cricket.

For those eagerly awaiting the Second Eleven Annual 2025, the 40th edition of our popular handbook giving details of the previous summer’s Second XI Championship and T20 competition, along with a Who’s Who of cricketers involved and updated records, this has been delayed, but is expected to be available in mid-May; members will be kept informed of its progress.

Cricket Witness: The Dream That Died - Gwilym Rowland and Welsh Cricket, by Andrew Hignell. Cover shows Gwilym Rowland, in waistcoat, jacket and tie, seated behind an office desk.

Among our other recent publications is The Dream That Died: Gwilym Rowland and Welsh Cricket, in which Andrew Hignell tells the story of Gwilym Evans Rowland, a businessman who tried to raise cricket’s profile in Wales by creating a team which played home internationals against Scotland and Ireland and appeared at Lord’s. Gwilym ruffled feathers at Glamorgan CCC, but paid for matches played by the Wales team and the amateur Welsh Cygnets, and a visit by the United Berlin team in 1930. But after his business went into liquidation, he ended penniless, and his body was found in a ditch in 1938. 

Cricket Witness: Cricket's Revolution - Its Sudden Leap into Modernity, by Eric Midwinter Covers shows 18th century bowler David Harris holding up a ball, in a sketch by George Shepheard; William Clarke, 19th century slow bowler and impresario, in a top hat; WG Grace, c 1899, with beard, striped cap and bat, photo by WA Rouch

Cricket’s Revolution: Its Sudden Leap into Modernity is Eric Midwinter’s analysis of the transformation of cricket from a folk game played in various versions in isolated localities to a singular and recognisable national sport, with agreed laws and an undisputed central authority. This switch, over thirty years in the early 19th century, was a part of the equally abrupt emergence of a nation turning to the rationalisation of society and away from the arbitrary confusion of the 18th century. Against this background, Midwinter explores the development of the unified format of cricket’s laws, controls, clubs, competitions, records and statistics. 

ACS Overseas First-Class Annual 2024, compiled by John Bryant. 16th edition. Cover shows the white silhouette of a bowler about to deliver the ball, against a black background. The red ball in the bowler's hand carries a map of the world.

The 16th edition of the Overseas First-Class Annual is now on sale; covering all first-class cricket worldwide in 2023/24, it includes 559 full scorecards, and brief narratives plus league tables for each country’s first-class tournaments.

The latest issue of The Cricket Statistician, edited by Jonathan Northall, is sent to members in their quarterly mailings, but extra copies and previous issues are available in the shop.

Les Jackson and Cliff Gladwin: Masters of their craft, by John Shawcroft Cover shows Les Jackson and Cliff Gladwin, in whites with Derbyshire sweaters, standing in front of a scoreboard

Les Jackson and Cliff Gladwin: Masters of their Craft is John Shawcroft’s account of the Derbyshire fast bowlers who formed the most dangerous new-ball attack in the County Championship throughout most of the 1950s. Jackson and Gladwin came from mining villages, and their physiques were developed by years at the coalface, but they received little recognition from England’s Test selectors: Jackson appeared in only two Tests, 12 years apart, which Fred Trueman put down to snobbery, while Gladwin played eight Tests and toured South Africa, but operated in Alec Bedser’s shadow.

Town v Gown; City v Village A History of Cricket in Cambridge by Tony Watts Covers shows a montage of photos, with Tom Hayward and Jack Hobbs striding out to bat, a colour photo showing a match in front of Clare College's pavilion, and a black and white photo showing spectators sitting on the grass to watch a match at Parker's Piece

In Town v Gown; City v Village: A History of Cricket in Cambridge, Tony Watts examines Cambridge’s extraordinarily rich cricket culture and tradition. Though Town and Gown never harnessed satisfactorily their joint resources, the University provided first-class cricket for well over a century, bringing county and international teams to Fenner’s, while strong city clubs played ‘friendly’ cricket on college grounds run by dynasties of extraordinary groundsmen. But in recent years, university cricket has lost its first-class status, and the growth of integrated club leagues has shifted the balance from city clubs to surrounding villages. The reprint of this book has now arrived.

You Can't Hurry Us: A History of Cricket in Suffolk by Simon Sweetman

Simon Sweetman’s You Can’t Hurry Us: A History of Cricket in Suffolk covers the background to county cricket in Suffolk in the eighteenth century, through progress from two to three-day games, to the adoption of one-day and T20 cricket, taking in the club scene, the start of league cricket and women’s cricket. In the early years, Suffolk helped with the game’s development, but later found itself too far from cricket’s centres of power, and multiple attempts at setting up a county club petered out before the present one was formed in 1932. Since then, Suffolk have won the Minor County Championship three times outright and shared it once.

Ernest Parker: Not a Love Story, by Max Bonnell and Andrew Sproull

In Ernest Parker: Not a Love Story, Max Bonnell and Andrew Sproul tell the story of the finest cricketer produced by Western Australia before the Second World War. Parker, a practising lawyer, was also a tennis player good enough to win the tournament now known as the Australian Open, and his premature death in the Great War was a tragedy that resounded throughout his home state. Not a Love Story explores not only the public triumphs of Parker’s life, but also his ambivalent attitude towards his great talents, and the mystery behind his yearning for a quiet, anonymous life.

The Cricket Professionals of Oxford by Michael Stimpson. Photo shows Merton College, the Cricketers' Arms at Temple Cowley, Neville Rogers (batting), George Brown (posing with bat) and Jack Brooks (bowling).

In The Cricket Professionals of Oxford, Michael Stimpson tells the stories of professional cricketers from the Oxford area over the last 200 years. These include underarm bowler Peter Bancalari in the 1820s, fiery roundarm bowler David Burrin in the 1850s, and fast man ‘Brusher’ Rogers at the end of the Victorian era; between the wars, George Brown and Johnny Arnold batted for England, and more recently Jack Brooks was a championship winner with Yorkshire.

Outside the Tent: Free Enterprise in Australian Cricket, 1912-1987, by Stephen Musk

In Outside the Tent, Stephen Musk analyses how Australian cricketers of the 20th century rebelled against the yoke of the Board of Control by taking part in unofficial international tours, or by forsaking Australia to take up careers as professionals in England – and draws attention to some unjustly forgotten tours to North America, India and South Africa, in the third book in our series on Cricket Tours.

Best of Enemies: The rivalry between Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire, and Derby County and Nottingham Forest

In Best of Enemies, John Shawcroft explores the keen cricketing rivalry between Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire – whose contests in the 1930s, when both vied for the County Championship, sometimes eclipsed even the Roses matches – as well as that of their football cousins, Derby County and Nottingham Forest.

A few extra copies of Mr. Wooller’s Legacy: A history of cricket at Colwyn Bay and in Denbighshire, which sold out last year, have now become available.

First-Class Matches Pakistan 2004/05 to 2006/07

A few copies remain of First-Class Matches: Pakistan 2004/05 to 2006/07, the eleventh volume of scorecards in our ‘Hard to Get’ series.

We have now sold out of A Game Emerging: Yorkshire cricket before the coming of the All England Eleven, in which Jeremy Lonsdale extended his acclaimed series on Yorkshire cricket back to the 1750s, but you can still obtain the book directly from Jeremy at livesincricket@acscricket.com as well as listen to an interview with him about the book on YouTube.

All books published in the last year which remain in stock appear under Latest Publications, and some of our older publications are now being made available via Google Play, including the Cricket Witness series and Lives in Cricket.

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