Boon: in the Firing Line an autobiography with A. Mark Thomas
Sydney: Sun Australia, 1993 ISBN 0725107243
I've read quite a few cricket books and it's fair to say the quality is variable, especially when it comes to cricketers writing about themselves. This "autobiography" falls more toward the disappointing side of the ledger, despite the fact that David Boon is one of the all-time-great Australian cricketers with, I am sure, a fund of excellent stories to tell.
The reasons why this book is not what it could be are several-fold. Firstly, it's a book written before Boon's career was over - much is made of his lost opportunity to score a century at Lord's in 1989, but of course he scored a magnificent 150 on his next visit, so time has healed that wound. There is nothing about his fielding to Warne (famously catching the hat-trick ball in Melbourne), or watching him bowl, because this is a halfway-house of a book.
The main reason why this book is less than it could be is the fact that despite being termed an autobiography, I'm sure David Boon didn't write a word of it. It's clearly a book written by Thomas, based on interviews with the man himself and other people considered significant to the story. Unfortunately, Thomas has a clunky formulaic style of writing, and spends a lot of the time discussing the matches in general, instead of Boon's part in them.
It is also a curiously constructed book - a brief chapter on formative years, and Boon's time playing for Tasmania, before sections on playing England, the West Indies, and New Zealand before a final section where various people (Geoff Marsh, Richard Hadlee, the commentator Neville Oliver, Boon's wife and his first coach) write their opinions of the man.
Boon is famously a shy man and one of few words, but by far the best parts of the book are when he relates a story about a particular match, with a comment that is simultaneously cutting and funny. The book shows him as a team man first and foremost - a firm friend, but someone who's wrong side you should avoid if possible.
As a cricket tragic of a certain age (the same generation, if slightly younger) than David Boon, the description of particular matches and players brings back some great personal memories of watching those series, through both painful and glorious times for the Australian cricket team.
It's just a shame that the book provides no real insights into Boon the man, or Boon the player. I picked this book up for two dollars in my local op-shop, and that's about the worth of it.
Cheers for now, from
A View Over the Be