As comprehensive and opinionated as ever. * Independent on Sunday *
Wisden-omaniacs measure out their life in Test matches and sodden trips to county grounds, and the book becomes a form of autobiography. It captures a world in a single, squat volume, and for a moment allows us to forget that time must move on. -- Stephen Moss * Observer *
Part of the establishment, yet prepared to challenge the establishment, Wisden has earned the respect and affection of every serious sports fan. In its 150th year, that iconic yellow jacket still marks a fixed point in a disorderly world. -- Simon Briggs * Daily Telegraph *
After 150 editions, Wisden Cricketers' Almanack shows little sign of leaving the crease. The daddy reigns supreme. -- Patrick Kidd * The Times *
The modern Wisden is a marvel of accuracy and inclusiveness -- John Woodcock * The Times *
Nothing beats the reassuring thud on the doormat in April when Wisden lands, as a harbinger of the season to come and a reminder of seasons gone. -- Mike Atherton * The Times *
each Wisden, once acquired, is not just for a season, it is for life, a treasure to be used as research, diversion or, in its nicely fading yellow jacket, pure decoration. -- Alan Lee * The Times *
A truly unique sporting institution -- Matthew Engel * Financial Times *
A shelf-full of Wisdens is a sign of civilisation and a curious mind. -- Patrick Kidd * The Times *
The 150th Wisden is a wonderful read... a treasure trove of superb writing * Sunday Express *
Vital if you're the kind of person who leaps from their chair at the dinner table and marches into the next room demanding to clarify what year Graham Gooch finally dropped David Gower. -- Mile Jupp * Saga *
More reliable than a swallow, the sight of a new Wisden on the shelves is proof summer is here. * Living North *
A 150-year-old book that draws in the profound and the absurd as well as the venerable and the modern, the meaningful and the inconsequential. It asks few favours. In words and numbers Wisden intelligently records cricket as it has been and as it is. * The Cricketer *
The charm is in the incidental detail. -- Adrian Tahourdin * TLS *