<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>What happens to cricketers when their reflexes slow down, when their hand-eye coordination declines, when the quality of the afternoon tea is more important than the quality of the pitch? Nothing. They keep playing. In the Vets.<br>Playing in the Twilight chronicles the journey of Melbourne's Canterbury Cricket Club veterans' team through a decade of cricket.<br>Michael Angwin writes about the games themselves, and about what Canterbury's veterans value about cricket and how those values are reflected in the way they play it.<br>Playing in the Twilight has a warm, self-mocking, self-deprecating style reflecting the ways Canterbury's veterans engage with each other and with their rivals. As their careers lengthen, cricket becomes for Canterbury's vets not just a Sunday afternoon activity but a source of comradeship and community beyond Canterbury and even beyond Australia.<br>Playing in the Twilight is whimsical and wistful, and nostalgic and regretful at its best on gentle late-summer days, stoic and resigned, joyful in languor and dependent on friendship and love.<br>The book's inspiration includes philosophy, science, the Olympics, politics, Disney, Machiavelli, JMW Turner, Greek mythology, Catholic doctrine and Scottish insular monasticism.<br>It celebrates veteran cricketers when their bodies no longer respond to their still agile minds, like a hat that one of Canterbury's stalwarts wore: Old, frayed, experienced, loved, not as effective as it once was, but serviceable enough to keep going without having to be replaced by a new version that might not see out even one summer.
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