David Frith

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

David Edward John Frith (1937 - ) is a leading cricketing writer and historian.

David Frith was born in London on 16 March 1937. His family moved to Sydney in when he was eleven. Early in his career he worked in the Daily Mirror and the Commonwealth Bank at Cronulla. He returned to England in 1964.

After working as freelance writer, he became the deputy editor and later in 1973, the editor of The Cricketer. He founded the Wisden Cricket Monthly and edited from June 1979 to February 1996.

Particularly specialising in Ashes Test Match history, Frith has written dozens of books, on both cricket in modern times and also cricket of the past. His major works include My dear victorious Stod (a biography of Andrew Stoddart), Silence of the Heart (on cricketing suicides, originally published as By His Own Hand), Fast Men, Slow Men (about fast bowlers and spinners), Caught England, Bowled Australia (autobiography), The Trailblazers (the English tour of Australia in 1861-1862), The Archie Jackson Story (biography) and Bodyline Autopsy. He has also been involved in producing cricketing videos, which have been extremely successful.

In association with the National Film and Television Archive, he has presented an annual Archive Cricket Film Evening at the National Film Theatre in London since 1981.

In 2003 he became the first author to win the Cricket Society's Book of the Year award three times, and was also a finalist in the William Hill Sports Book awards for his Bodyline book.

[edit] References

  • Richard Cashman et al (ed), The Oxford Companion to Australian Cricket, Oxford University Press (1996)