Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

FINAL INNINGS : A Voyage Deep Into Uncharted Waters, Set In The World Of Cricket

Rate this book
Final Innings is the story of five tumultuous years in the life of a successful and internationally admired Indian cricketer, Ramdas Upreti.  It explores the depths of human desire and disillusionment, hope and regret, love and longing, and deep passions. Above all it is a story of extraordinary courage in the teeth of danger and adversity. A combination of extraordinary circumstances and coincidences on and off the cricket field conspire to rekindle Ramdas’ obsessions with contemporary global and subcontinental gridlocks. Three complex relationships add their own with Anne, his ex-girlfriend, with Pakistani nurse Nargis, and the bond he develops with Nargis’ father, the Pakistani umpire Khalid Azam. Events now begin to overtake him, and his life slowly begins to unravel. These multiple strands eventually converge to create a stirring and memorable crescendo. Final Innings brings to life our the reality that subcontinental teams tend to struggle in the SENA countries, the fraught India-Pakistan relationship, the powder keg called Kashmir, terrorism, climate change and the environment. The plot unfolds over four ‘Innings’ like the build-up to the climax of a cliff-hanger Test Match. The action swings across India, Australia, England, Pakistan and the UAE. ‘Final Innings’ is a voyage deep into dark, choppy and uncharted waters. It is not about about the T-20 leagues, nor about corruption and match-fixing. It is a thought-provoking and deeply moving human story which happens to be set in the world of cricket.

484 pages, Kindle Edition

Published November 26, 2020

Loading...
Loading...

About the author

Sunil Gupta

134 books13 followers
India's best-known working photographer, Gupta is also a well-known artist, curator, and writer.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
1 (50%)
4 stars
1 (50%)
3 stars
0 (0%)
2 stars
0 (0%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 of 1 review
Profile Image for Tripfiction.
2,082 reviews215 followers
February 11, 2021
One for lovers of cricket!



Final Innings is a great read for anyone interested in cricket and, in particular, cricket on the subcontinent. It follows the Indian team in a series of fictional matches in India itself, and in Australia, England and the UAE. The different wickets, the way the ball behaves, and how the varying cultures impact the players are all expertly portrayed. I learnt a lot. Not surprising because Sunil, as well as being an author, an actor and an ex advertising executive, is also a very experienced broadcast commentator on cricket. He brings authority to his writing.

But Final Innings is so very much more than a catalogue of matches won and lost. It is the story of the life of Ramdas Upreti, an (imagined) Indian batsman. The book opens with Ramdas at the crease in a test match in Adelaide in 2016. He is hit on the head by a bouncer and transferred to hospital, where he remains for weeks. He is looked after by Nurse Nargis, a Pakistani now living and married in Australia. They bond through their love of old Bollywood movies. There is a terrorist attack in Adelaide and Ramdas moves back to India to recuperate and recover from his injury. He can’t get Nargis out of his thoughts. Two aspects play on his mind – first her father, Khalid Azam, was by coincidence the umpire in the match in which he was injured and second, her husband had disappeared in the terrorist attack itself. He is presumed dead.

Back in India he begins the long (and some say impossible) task of getting back to playing first class cricket. It is a daunting journey. By his side is Anne, his girlfriend from the past who may still be romantically involved. They have a complicated, but essentially supportive, relationship. Anne is into ecology and stopping the increasing pollution of the Indian countryside. Ramdas recovers and again plays test match cricket for India – until he has a stroke whilst batting. He is once more in hospital and his first class career is over. He now wants to focus on what he can give back to the game as a coach or mentor. His overtures are not well met in India but they are taken up by Khalid Azam, the Pakistani umpire. Ramdas meets the Pakistan prime minister (himself a ex cricketer) and is taken on first to coach the Pakistan Under 19 team and then to front an international cricketing academy. There is, of course, some hostility in India to an Indian assisting the Pakistan cricketing authority and in Pakistan to exactly the same thing. Ramdas spends more time in Pakistan and inevitably again meets Nargis, now a nurse working in the dangerous tribal lands. The attraction, on both sides, still remains.

Ramdas is an idealist, but he becomes increasingly trapped in the murky world of India / Pakistan realpolitik. There are hidden motives behind people’s actions. Ramdas thinks he can change the world. He cannot. Thrown into the mix is the desire by some for Kashmir to be independent and not occupied on one side of the dividing line by India and on the other by Pakistan. Regional politics dominate.

The book moves to a quite startling conclusion. And, right until almost the end, Ramdas finds it hard to resolve his dilemma between Anne and Nargis. Which (if either) will he choose if the has the choice?

Final Innings is a really good read for cricket enthusiasts, for those who can emphasise with the challenges that Ramdas faces in his life, and for those who wish to educate themselves in the mysteries of Indian / Pakistani / Kashmiri politics. It works at many levels.
Displaying 1 of 1 review