Caught In Action - 20 Years of West Indies
Cricket
Photography
Caught
In Action - Overview
Caught In Action - 20 Years of West Indies
Cricket Photography, by Gordon Brooks beautifully
features the very best of his work, most of which has never
been published before. Watch the story of West Indies cricket unfold
before your eyes as you enjoy studying these wonderful cricket photos.
Every cricket fan will want a copy of this book.
Caught
In Action - Full Title
Caught In Action - 20 Years of West Indies
Cricket Photography:
Caught
In Action - Book Cover
Caught In Action - Book Review
You need not know the man behind 'Caught in Action - 20 Years of West
Indies Cricket Photography' to appreciate and revere it as the finest
published work of its kind. But if you do know Gordon Brooks, the
legendary Barbadian photographer who followed and captured the West
Indies cricket team across the globe, the hard cover book is even a
more treasured treasure.
'Caught in Action - 20 Years of West Indies Cricket Photography',
published in 2003, is not just a masterpiece, not just a book of West
Indies cricket photography, it is more, much more. It is a 20-year,
photo-documentary of West Indies cricket, the heartbeat of a peoples'
soul, during two contrasting decades.
Brooks and his camera outline in acute, sometimes piercing detail,
memories and moments that have defined the unmistakable brand known to
cricket lovers everywhere as 'West Indies'. His photographs capture the
essence and identity of West Indies cricket, documented by the late
Jamaican Prime Minister Michael Manley as, 'the most successful
co-operative endeavor and, as such, is a constant reminder to a people
of otherwise wayward insularity of the value of collaboration'.
Brooks, though, is not just a renowned photographer. Among cricket
photographers in the Caribbean and the world, he is known as the nice
guy. He is quiet and affable, warm and willing, helpful and modest. A
gentleman, raised and schooled in the days when opening a door for a
lady was not a novelty but an obligation. In the selfish and cut throat
world of print media, when other photographers on tour have trouble
with their equipment Gordon, without hesitation, is the very first to
lend a hand.
Brooks is the kind of guy who you are delighted you have been honored
to meet, your only regret being that you had not known him sooner. Rev
Wes Hall, in his tribute in the book, describes him as a 'A Master of
His Art' and the Barbados' Nation, Editor- in-Chief Harold Hoyte, in
his introduction, declares Brooks as 'A Distinguished Sort of a Cricket
Person.' Their words in different ways seek to capture his warmth for
humanity, his untiring love for photography and his laboured dedication
to West Indies cricket.
The man's nature, his very being, is presented in his book of black and
white glossy photography, twenty years labour from just beyond the
boundary rope. The photographs present a sojourn into his outlook on
life through West Indies cricket. That he managed to secure another
icon in Tony Cozier to do the introductions to each of the four
sections and all the captions is a testimony to Brooks' insistence on
supreme quality and distinctive class.
That photograph of that stunning slip catch, those stumps scattering,
that batsman barely ducking out of the way of a lethal bouncer or of
that impetuously perfect cover driven four, all capture the moment's
magnificence. But the great photographers are distinguished by their
artistic eye, their ability to see and capture that exquisite shot of a
spectator's chin propped in his hand, hat drooping over his face and
tears swelling in his eyes as his team's chances fade.
Gordon Brooks offers the clearly undefined but unmistakable 'more' that
confirms him as a legend in his field, "no less a professional than
those whom he has so artistically captured in this still, yet moving
documentary," as written by Clive Lloyd in his tribute.
A picture of the brave but battered Mohinder Amarnath spitting blood
into a rag and on his shirt at the Kensington Oval in 1980 after a
bouncer ripped his mouth apart is one that expounds volumes on the
ferocity of the West Indies four prong pace attack of those days. There
are dozens of other photographs of similar calibre and clarity.
Malcolm Marshall having New Zealand's Jeremy Coney in a leaping tangle
as he tried to avoid a lifter. Joel Garner with a stare of death and
the intensity of a focused warrior firing at a hastily evasive Ken
Rutherford. Gordon Greenidge like a champion thoroughbred belting a
pull away as his eyes follow the ball all the way to the boundary from
behind a pair of sunglasses that does a poor job in trying to hide his
unmasked joy. Viv Richards, miles down the track and lifting some
unfortunate fast bowler from the Kensington Oval to somewhere else in
Barbados. They all do justice to that often repeated wisdom that a
picture tells a thousand words.
Those were the days when all was well. Brooks' lens did not fail when
the tides had turned on the Windies. Jimmy Adams at the wicket in
Bridgetown 1995 bending over his bat, a look of demeaning despair
hovers over him as he contemplates a 2-1 series loss to Australia at
home. It was the blow that formalized and certified the end of the West
Indies' supreme reign.
And another from that same Kensington match when Australia crushed the
West Indies, a photograph that Cozier captioned 'sorrow in the slips'
crisply depicts the West Indies misery. It pictures Richie Richardson
wiping his eyes, Carl Hooper chewing on his finger and a bowed Brian
Lara leaning on him at arm's length for support. All three men look as
though they are standing in front a firing squad awaiting its final
order.
There are a few pictures though that one struggles to comprehend as
part of this collection. Photographs such as some Australian fans
genuflecting to Mark Taylor for making a century at the Antigua
Recreation ground in 1991 are good ones but do not belong in this work.
Neither does one of another ordinary Australian fan running onto the
field. Lee Germon, the New Zealand captain doing a handstand and a
flag-carrying Kiwi fan making way to the middle to congratulate Nathan
Astle for getting to a ton are also out of place.
With those photographs it is just slightly overdone. They are good
pictures, but a shrewder editor would have recognized their
inappropriateness early and let them go. The value of the book though,
remains esteemed. Unless Brooks and his publisher, Wordsmith
International, outdo themselves with a second volume it is difficult to
think of anyone bettering this jewel.
It is a mantle piece, collector's item, the only one of its kind on the
planet and a must have for West Indies cricket fanatics and serious
fans.
From the first picture of a laden footed and stunned Geoff Boycott's
off-stump cart-wheeling to the wicketkeeper courtesy of the final
delivery of that famous Michael Holding over, to the very last of the
outstretched arms of Curtly Ambrose waving goodbye at the end of his
career, the book is a joy. It is hard to think of a better way to
spend $39.95 USD on anything West Indian.
Imran Khan wrote this review article it was taken from the starbroek
news of January 12th 2004
| Format: |
Hardcover |
| Size: |
152 pages |
| Costs: |
$39.95 |
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