A warm and detailed biography... and ...an engaging and worthwhile read.
-- Brian Halford * The Cricketer Magazine *
One of the strengths of the book is that it is as much about MJK the man as it is about the cricketer... MJK's two trips to the sub-continent, in 1961/62 and 1963/64, never were the subject of books, and no one has written at length about England's tours to the Caribbean in 1959/60, South Africa in 1964/65 and Australian in 1965/66 since those series took place. So this one is a valuable book simply for examining those long forgotten ventures, particularly as that is done with input from MJK and others... the book is well illustrated, and has a decent index. For anyone interested in English cricket in the 1960s the book is certainly recommended.
-- Martin Chandler * Cricketweb.net *
I particularly enjoyed the account of the 1965-66 Ashes series, one that has not gone down in the annals of the game as one of the best, but which from reading this account was often closely contested, and played for the most part in a good and enterprising spirit... Although cricketing biographies, especially those that focus on the playing career, can all too easily fail to capture the personality of the subject, this is a not an accusation that can be levelled at Mike Thompson's book. He has succeeded in his aim to deliver an account of Mike Smith on the cricket field, and in so doing has also captured the sometimes enigmatic but always appealing personality of one of England's finest post-war players.
-- Richard Lawrence * Association of Cricket Statisticians *
Mike Thompson is to be congratulated on the depth and breadth of his research into his distinguished subject's career from captaincy of Oxford to leadership of the Warwickshire and England teams. I found some of the footnotes on Mike's Oxford teammates particularly fascinating. Thompson has interviewed and corresponded with a host of Smith's fellow players and contemporaries in both the county and international game... and built up a significant relationship with his subject... [it] gives a feeling of intimacy and reality to the narrative. Thoroughly recommended to all interested in the career of a great cricketer.
-- Norman Crampton * Member of MCC and ex-Member Yorkshire and Somerset *