
Simon Hughes (1) (1959–)
Author of A Lot of Hard Yakka: Triumph and Torment - A County Cricketer's Life
For other authors named Simon Hughes, see the disambiguation page.
Works by Simon Hughes
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Hughes, Simon
- Legal name
- Hughes, Simon Peter
- Birthdate
- 1959-12-20
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Durham University
- Occupations
- cricketer
sports commentator
journalist - Organizations
- LFC Weekly magazine
- Relationships
- Hughes, Bettany (sister)
- Nationality
- UK
- Birthplace
- Kingston-upon-Thames, Surrey, England, UK
- Places of residence
- Liverpool, England, UK
- Associated Place (for map)
- England, UK
Members
Reviews
A Lot of Hard Yakka, Triumph and Torment: A County Cricketer's Life: Cricketing Life on the County Circuit by Simon Hughes
I had never heard of Simon Hughes before reading "A lot of hard yakka". Interesting chap, with an interesting look into the life and career of a non-elite cricketer that doesn't reach the levels he'd dreamt of.
Hughes does well to write honestly about the ups and downs of county cricket, how it affected his personal life and vice versa. It makes a pleasant change from the usual ghost written autobiography that goes no further than the usual "in the match against Glamorgan I scored 36 and took show more 2/38 ..."
This is not the best cricket autobiography I have read (that title currently goes to "According to Skull" by Kerry O'Keefe) but it is worth a read (as opposed to Hughes's follow-up "Yakking all over the world", which was very second rate). show less
Hughes does well to write honestly about the ups and downs of county cricket, how it affected his personal life and vice versa. It makes a pleasant change from the usual ghost written autobiography that goes no further than the usual "in the match against Glamorgan I scored 36 and took show more 2/38 ..."
This is not the best cricket autobiography I have read (that title currently goes to "According to Skull" by Kerry O'Keefe) but it is worth a read (as opposed to Hughes's follow-up "Yakking all over the world", which was very second rate). show less
I bought this book on the strength of its reviews and reputation, looking for some insight into the heroically unglamorous life of the county cricketer. I was disappointed that what I got was mostly a string of rather predictable 'humorous' anecdotes about some of the personalities in the game during the time Hughes played it. The insights, when they come, are mostly petty is-it-any-wonder grumbles about the administration of English cricket or fatuous one-line observations like "Ultimately, show more professional cricket is entertainment, a spectacle with performers." I considered putting it to one side about a third of the way through, but did read to the end. I wish now I'd spent that time finding another, better book on the subject. Measured against a book like Dean Wareham's Black Postcards -- another memoir of a unstarry career in a field obsessed with stars -- Hughes's account is both lightweight and a long, repetitive slog. show less
And God Created Cricket: An Irreverent History of the English Game and How Other People (like Australians) Got Annoyingly Good at it by Simon Hughes
Thoroughly enjoyable romp through cricket's history up to England winning the Ashes in 2009. Lots of stories through the ages, many very funny.
Hughes's first book, "A lot of Hard Yakka", is one of the best cricket books I've read; a very good description of the good-but-not great cricketers' lives. In that book Hughes was very frank about the issues he faced throughout his career and the good and bad times.
"Yakking around the world", on the other hand, is the obvious result of good sales figures for "A lot of Hard Yakka" and the rsulting suggestion by the publishing company for some sort of sequel.
Thus, we get Hughes talking show more about his sexual exploits during his career; none overly interesting but I felt glad that he finally met someone because I knew the end of the book was nigh. show less
"Yakking around the world", on the other hand, is the obvious result of good sales figures for "A lot of Hard Yakka" and the rsulting suggestion by the publishing company for some sort of sequel.
Thus, we get Hughes talking show more about his sexual exploits during his career; none overly interesting but I felt glad that he finally met someone because I knew the end of the book was nigh. show less
Awards
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Statistics
- Works
- 9
- Members
- 320
- Popularity
- #73,922
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 5
- ISBNs
- 50












