A Lot of Hard Yakka

A Lot of Hard Yakka
Author Simon Hughes
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Publisher Headline Book Publishing
Publication date
1998
Pages 320
ISBN 978-0747255161
Preceded by From Minor to Major (1992)
Followed by Yakking Around the World: A Cricketer's Quest for Love and Utopia (2001)

A Lot of Hard Yakka, subtitled "Triumph and torment: a county cricketer's life," is the first volume of autobiography by the cricketer-journalist Simon Hughes, and the William Hill Sports Book of the Year for 1997,[1] making it the first volume on cricket thus to be fêted. Its success, as surmised by Leslie Thomas in a review for Wisden Cricketers' Almanack, "came more than a little to the author's surprise":

I mentioned to Hughes that I had enjoyed his tale of a cricketer's beginnings, his life in and out of the game, and his eventual departure from it, but that I thought it was a terrible title. Amiable chap that he is, he agreed. Yakka is an Australianism, meaning work, endeavour, experience (I think) [.... I]t makes a breezy and irreverent read.[2]

Written in a droll and self-deprecating and often colloquial style, the book is now widely esteemed a genre classic, having earned kudos from such critics as Michael Parkinson and Ian Wooldridge, and served to promote Hughes's now-established career in sports journalism. It has a sequel entitled Yakking Around the World.

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