Starts from Jimmy's retirement game against the West Indies last summer at Lord's where he had a test match to celebrate his career. It was the first test of the summer, and at 41 years old he wasn't in the teams plans any longer.
It seemed a fair call at the time given most test bowlers don't make it past their mid 30s, let alone 41. Looking to the future, and with the Ashes 18 months away at the time of his retirement, Key, Stokes and McCullum made a tough call on a player with huge longevity and success in the format. It went down in a Manchester coffee shop. Jimmy, having jumped on the tram thinking he was in for a 'player appraisal' equated the situation to when Joe Pesci's character is whacked in Goodfellas (1990).
There's a number of other insights into his career. At one point in a hospital, after his wife has had a miscarriage a nurse insensitively asks for an autograph. There's chapters on how important his parents, wife and daughters were in his career.
On James Taylor's debut in 2012, the diminutive batsman was snubbed by Kevin Pietersen in what became a toxic team environment. After having introduced himself to everyone in the dressing room and left, KP turned to the person next to him and asked 'what's that guys name?'. Following a session of batting at Headingley against a fierce South Africa attack with the likes of Philander, Morkel and Steyn, KP tells coach Andy Flower that James Taylor is nowhere near good enough for test cricket, himself on the way to a big hundred.
There's other insights like when his time in the test finally came against New Zealand in 2008. It had been five years since his debut under Nasser Hussain. There's a lot of fond affection for all the games where he bowled sides out, or scored an unlikely 81 against India at Trent Bridge - Joe Root signed a bat 'to the allrounder' and gave it to Jimmy after the game.
In the more recent years he shares opinions on an ill-fated tour of Australia last time around which the whole team was dreading. 'Everyone is desperate to go home', having to stay in a Brisbane motel isolating because of the ongoing pandemic.
He comes across as likeable and it's an easy read. Ghosted by his co-podcaster, Felix White, it gets to the heart of his views on his career. Some chapters, like Mitchell Johnson's Ashes in 2014 receive as few as four pages, but on the whole there's enough in there to pick up for fans of England cricket.