EBOOK

About
The first ever history of women's cricket in England - from its origins in the 18th century through to the present day.
From MCC & Cricket Society Book of the Year finalist Dr Raf Nicholson, a leading writer on the women's game.
Foreword by Charlotte Edwards CBE.
The book shows that women have been part of cricket's story from the very beginning - and have often led the way in innovations:
• Features interviews with key figures in women's cricket history, including Rachael Heyhoe Flint, Charlotte Edwards, Clare Connor, Enid Bakewell, Claire Taylor and Ruth Prideaux.
• Meet the pioneering women who founded the first Women's Cricket Association in 1926, organised a round-the-world tour on a shoestring to play the first women's Tests, and spent 47 years petitioning MCC before being allowed to play at Lord's.
• From the invention of roundarm bowling in the 1800s, to contesting the first World Cup (1973), the first Twenty20 international (2004) and the first franchise cricket in England (the Kia Super League), women have frequently been at the forefront of the game's development.
• Draws on previously unpublished material from the Women's Cricket Association archive - including tour diaries, letters and the minutes of the International Women's Cricket Council.
The Women in Whites debunks long-held assumptions, showing that cricket is not - and never was - just a 'man's sport'. Think you know everything there is to know about the history of cricket? Read this book and think again.
From MCC & Cricket Society Book of the Year finalist Dr Raf Nicholson, a leading writer on the women's game.
Foreword by Charlotte Edwards CBE.
The book shows that women have been part of cricket's story from the very beginning - and have often led the way in innovations:
• Features interviews with key figures in women's cricket history, including Rachael Heyhoe Flint, Charlotte Edwards, Clare Connor, Enid Bakewell, Claire Taylor and Ruth Prideaux.
• Meet the pioneering women who founded the first Women's Cricket Association in 1926, organised a round-the-world tour on a shoestring to play the first women's Tests, and spent 47 years petitioning MCC before being allowed to play at Lord's.
• From the invention of roundarm bowling in the 1800s, to contesting the first World Cup (1973), the first Twenty20 international (2004) and the first franchise cricket in England (the Kia Super League), women have frequently been at the forefront of the game's development.
• Draws on previously unpublished material from the Women's Cricket Association archive - including tour diaries, letters and the minutes of the International Women's Cricket Council.
The Women in Whites debunks long-held assumptions, showing that cricket is not - and never was - just a 'man's sport'. Think you know everything there is to know about the history of cricket? Read this book and think again.