This tale reads like an extended scenario containing characters back stories with a central motif – the gift of speed. Speed which comes in several different forms: pace at the bowling crease, decisiveness in business and by way of contrast a lack of speed in relationships.
The following contains spoilers.
Unfortunately what could have been an interesting meditation turns into a series of hermetically sealed episodes with insufficient interaction between the protagonists. Even when they do occur they tend to be one–off occurrences, for instance when the teenage central character, Michael discovers a businessman with his secret E-type Jaguar and is implicitly sworn to silence, nothing develops from the encounter.
Michael is trying to bowl fast, hurling countless deliveries against the back fence. Ultimately he hurts himself in his first big match as he realizes some people naturally have the gift of speed, others do not. At least he learns from the experience, unlike the businessman, who fangs his E-type once too often.
The young man’s injury is partly caused by wearing the wrong boots, batsman’s boots rather than bowlers, purchased from the Lindsay Hassett Sports Store in Melbourne, despite the advice of the great ‘Puck’ himself. I myself have visited the Lindsay Hassett Sports Store as a very young boy, in the company of my father. We were lucky enough to spot the man himself sitting at his desk in his office. I had no idea who he was, but I soon learned, which leads me to some aspects of the story which were disappointing. First off, Lindsay Hassett was famous for his irresistible sense of humour, but not here, Carroll misses an opportunity, I feel.
Apart from one chilling character who makes a most memorable appearance then disappears completely, one irritating decision is the deliberate anonymising of the specific location of the action - always the author refers somewhat awkwardly to 'the suburb’. The events take place during the 1960-61 tour of Australia by the West Indies cricket team, led by Frank Worrall, an epic series with several of the most thrilling test matches ever played. They exist here as background only with a number of standalone moments with Worrall as he faces the loneliness of command. This is strange as he has in his team the fearsome and charismatic Winston Wesley Hall, extreme fast bowler and an obvious choice when the subject is the gift of speed. But we just get a lot of Worrall alone in his room.
By way of contrast with the speed issue is the slow death of the boy’s parents relationship and much sweeter, a nice moment of adolescent attraction between the boy and an orphan girl, where restraint serves them rather better than haste.