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Book Cover for: Wisden Cricketers' Almanack 2025, Lawrence Booth

Wisden Cricketers' Almanack 2025

Lawrence Booth

*Standard hardback edition*

The most famous sports book in the world, Wisden Cricketers' Almanack has been published every year since 1864.

Home to some of the finest sports writing of the year - from the likes of Lawrence Booth, Gideon Haigh, Rob Smyth, Patrick Collins, Simon Wilde, Osman Samiuddin, Tony Cozier, Benj Moorehead, Raf Nicholson and Dileep Premachandran - Wisden includes the thought-provoking Notes by the Editor, the famous Cricketers of the Year awards, and the authoritative obituaries. And, as ever, there are reports and scorecards for every Test, together with forthright opinion, compelling features and comprehensive records.

"There can't really be any doubt about the cricket book of the year, any year: it's obviously Wisden." Andrew Baker, The Daily Telegraph

@WisdenAlmanack

Book Details

  • Publisher: Wisden
  • Publish Date: Jul 15th, 2025
  • Pages: 1600
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - 0162
  • Dimensions: 6.22in - 3.98in - 1.00in - 1.00lb
  • EAN: 9781399421287
  • Categories: CricketAlmanacsEssays

About the Author

Booth, Lawrence: - Lawrence Booth writes the Online Sports Column of the Year, "The Top Spin", for the Daily Mail. He has also written four books on cricket, most recently "What are the Butchers For?" And Other Splendid Cricket Quotations.

Praise for this book

"It is a book of three parts: comment; record; and delightful minutiae, which always brings the most cheer." --Mike Atherton, The Times

"The publication of Wisden is cricket's equivalent of the state opening of Parliament. It's another great edition." --Oborne and Heller on Cricket podcast

"The pages are stacked full of information, quirks and great analysis of the game, as well as being a wonderful record." --Alison Mitchell, BBC World Service Stumped

"The big yellow book. The important one. The one aliens will be reading in hundreds of years' time when we as a species have wiped ourselves out and they've come down to work out how cricket worked." --The Final Word podcast