Book description
It is no mystery that today the name of Jack Iverson is virtually
unknown. For most of his life he was an unexceptional estate agent in
Australia. He died in obscurity, by his own hand, at the age of only
58. He was a clumsy fielder, and a hopeless batsman. But for four
years he was the best spin bowler in the world. The story of Jack
Iverson is one of the most remarkable in the history of cricket.
'Every now and then,' wrote one journalist, 'there comes a man whp can
do the right thing the wrong way round.' Iverson took up cricket, at
the advanced age of 31, as capriciously as he left it, joining a club
3ds XI in Melbourne one day, and instantly announcing himself as the
most prodigious and improbable spinner of a cricket ball. Mystery
Spinner is more than the beautifully written life of an elusive and
forgotten hero who, after his brief burst of celebrity, has left
strangely little trace in posterity. It is also the utterly compelling
story of Gideon Haigh's quest to solve the enduring riddle of Jack
Iverson's life. And above all it is a moving study, for an age that
presumes sporting prowess to be the ultimate definition of personal
identity, of how skill is half the battle in sport, and how it takes
an extraordinary individual to cope successfully with extraordinary achievement.