Reading The Test - a story centered around the stand-in England Test captain and a decider Ashes match - made me realize that sports fiction is a genre I haven't read much of, if at all. I wonder if there's a dearth of novels in this area or I'm just ignorant. Being a cricket fan, I enjoyed this well-penned book which, like Test cricket, is not really flashy but possessed a substance that was more deep and less edge of the seat stuff. I really enjoyed the romanticizing of Test cricket; the portions written about the game and its beauty touched a chord that justified the blurb that this is a love letter to Test cricket. There were also a lot of observations which, while mentioned in cricketing context, could apply across other fields and life in general too.
'When I was young, ecstasy meant sex. Now it's a cancelled meeting'
'Progress is quixotic. Days of work can amount to nothing - indeed, often make things worse. Then improvement occurs suddenly, unlooked for. Not quite a complete surprise, but almost so'
'Just because two people disagree doesn't mean one of them is right'
The best portions personally are not just one or two liners like above and are entire passages which I have highlighted but would be too much to type out here.
While the novel is centered around a cricket match, it's also about the struggles of Mac outside of cricket, - challenges of being a husband, a parent, a good man fighting his weaknesses, - which was something else that endeared me to the book. The Test also has quite a few humorous moments, and is not all serious all the time, especially when the butt of team jokes Tayls is involved.
Overall a lovely read, especially for Test cricket fans.
Closing with a quote that captures one of the major gripes against the game,and made me smile
'Cricket is a game which the English, not being a spiritual people, have invented to give themselves some conception of eternity'