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My Family's Keeper

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A cricket autobiography unlike any other; a universal story about how love for your family trumps everything.



Specialist Australian wicket-keepers who have worn the baggy green are a rare and tough breed. By the time Brad Haddin declared time on his career, the stats would put him alongside the greats of the modern era. But it was no easy road into the record books. A seasoned Haddin had to wait for Adam Gilchrist's retirement to make his Test debut at the age of 30. And, just four years into sport's toughest job, while on tour in the West Indies, Haddin received a call that changed everything: his pregnant wife, Karina, told him that their younger child, 16-month-old Mia, had a rare and aggressive form of cancer. Immediately relinquishing his hard-won cricket role, he flew across the globe to be with his family. Swapping the patient hours behind the wicket for the emotional rollercoaster of Mia's cancer treatment, Brad put everything else on hold as, over the next hellish 18 months, his daughter fought for her life. Only when Mia started to respond to treatment did Brad seek to return to international cricket. He did so in spectacular fashion: named vice-captain, he helped Australia rebuild so strongly it was able to carry off a fairy-tale 5-0 Ashes victory on home soil.



My Family's Keeper is the extraordinary story of how one of cricket's toughest competitors and his family dealt with a very private struggle, and a reminder of how teamwork and strong partnerships matter in life as much as they do in sport - especially when you want to beat cancer.





352 pages, Hardcover

Published January 1, 2016

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
50 reviews
May 12, 2017
I very much enjoyed this book. It was a mix of cricket and family. Am very impressed with Brad and his family and the love and support they give to each other. If more people followed the principles Brad lives by the world would be a better place.
2 reviews
January 26, 2017
Personal, professional

Not knowing how much input Brad himself had, and feeling that he has avoided criticism of Aust selectors, who have made errors persisting with older players, while not bringing on younger ones, particularly batsmen, But the book is very good nevertheless.
478 reviews
April 3, 2017
The beginning chapters alternated between the development of Brad Haddin's cricket career and the cancer treatment of his very young child. I found the chapters on the cancer treatment to be quite harrowing.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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