Rabu, 29 Desember 2010

KP: The Autobiography, by Kevin Pietersen

KP: The Autobiography, by Kevin Pietersen

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KP: The Autobiography, by Kevin Pietersen

KP: The Autobiography, by Kevin Pietersen



KP: The Autobiography, by Kevin Pietersen

Read Online and Download KP: The Autobiography, by Kevin Pietersen

The fascinating life story of professional cricketer Kevin Pietersen, MBE, from his childhood in South Africa to his recent experiences as one of the leading lights in the world of international cricket.Kevin was dropped from the England squad in February 2014, seemingly calling time on an international career that began nearly ten years earlier. The decision puzzled many observers - although the England team had failed miserably in the Ashes tour of 2013-14, Kevin was the tourists' leading run scorer across the series, and he remains the country's highest run scorer of all time across all formats of the game.Kevin reveals all in his autobiography, telling the stories behind the many other highs and lows of his incredible career. Giving readers the full story of his life, from his childhood in South Africa to his experiences as one of the leading lights in the world of international cricket, KP is an autobiography that entertains and fascinates readers in equal measure.

KP: The Autobiography, by Kevin Pietersen

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1363258 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-09-01
  • Released on: 2015-09-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 7.75" h x 1.00" w x 5.00" l, .66 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 336 pages
KP: The Autobiography, by Kevin Pietersen

Review Outrageous, audacious, jaw-dropping Sunday Times An essential read Daily Mail Utterly captivating Daily Telegraph The book that rocked the English cricketing world Mail on Sunday Hugely entertaining...a Red Bull-powered T20 run chase of a book Guardian A compelling glimpse into the pressures, strains - and egos - that make sport such a splendidly superior soap opera Independent A bomb planted under the English cricket establishment Financial Times

About the Author Kevin Peter Pietersen is a 34 year-old professional cricketer, and the highest England run scorer in all international forms of the game combined.


KP: The Autobiography, by Kevin Pietersen

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Most helpful customer reviews

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. The book isn't what the man is... By sarfaraz khatib I'm a huge KP fan. I like him both, as a cricketer as well as a person. Given that we all have shades of grey, it would be inappropriate to expect him to be saintly & attitude-free. It's his mercurial nature that makes him what he is. Unfortunately, despite having some mildly-shocking revelations, the book fails to impress, though it does make one glued to it. First of all, this should never have been called an Autobiography. It isn't one. It neither covers his full journey, nor it goes into details about occurrences apart from the sunset battles. While I personally enjoyed following all English cricketers on Twitter and enjoyed the banter, KP certainly wasn't enjoying it. Sad, he thought it that ugly and he certainly knew the intents better than I did. I am currently reading Ricky Ponting's autobiography and I find it so much more inspiring & enjoyable. KP, man... you deserved a better autobiography than this bitter tale. Thank you for entertaining us over the years.

8 of 11 people found the following review helpful. KP 'goes postal' on English cricket and takes down the management, team-mates and even the tea lady! By Malleus Maleficarum 1500 years ago, Procopius of Caesarea, the last historian of antiquity wrote 'The Secret History', the ultimate warts and all expose of the inner workings of the court of Justinian I of the Eastern Roman Empire where he laid bare the failings of the most exalted men and women of his time. KP's latest autobiography does a 'Secret History' on English cricket and he pretty much launches a blitzkrieg against his former colleagues and team-mates from which many may never recover. Justinian, at least wasn't alive when the Secret History was published - KP's team-mates are out of luck.To start off, it's clear that this is not a book about cricket - this is a book written with the sole aim of bringing out in the public domain KP's version of the extraordinary events that led to England's highest ever run-scorer being shunted out by his own team and what a narrative it is! At some points, you know that this is the lashing out of a desperate man who feels he has his back against the wall, with his own comrades having turned against him. There is some desultory description of his childhood and his growing years but the narrative, which oscillates back and forth between the later stages of his international career and events of his past is very clearly setup to provide the context to the behind the scenes revelations that KP wants the public to know.This book is probably best read as a confessional from a maverick who felt suffocated in his work place. There is precious little romance or the higher ideals of sport here and one would also argue, not an over-abundance of objectivity either. KP's world is dominated by back-stabbers, politicians and petty gossips. There is no doubt about how KP seems himself - the righteous hero who gave his all to his team and got nothing in return but vitriol and slights. It would be easy to dismiss this account as the delusions of an over-sensitive person who had an unreal image of his own achievements but the problem is that KP's record is quite stellar. Throughout his career as a batsman, he has been a stand-out performer in a team that is not really known for stand-out performers.There-in lies the heart of the story - KP was quite clearly more gifted and talented than most of his team mates and in terms of professional as well as pecuniary accomplishments, he dwarfed his comrades. His book makes it clear that he feels that this made him the target of others in the team who didn't and possibly couldn't have what he had. The tales of team mates sniping against him using a fake twitter account, the jibes on him in the customary books that English cricketers must release every 3 years make one wonder of how adults can be reduced to the level of playground bickering.What's most devastating though, is the picture he paints of the English cricket team and the management structures around it as a group of clique driven mediocrities who couldn't be trusted. Everyone in KP's sights gets an unbelievable roasting for their hypocrisy and their envious snipes at him. Pride of place goes to his former coach, Andy Flower - feted as a genius who brought about the golden age of English cricket in the late 2000s - but for KP, he is a pitiable corporate mid-manager, who destroyed team morale, betrayed the confidence of players, created an offensive team environment that sucked the joy out of life and was solely interested in managing the bosses. Next up is Matt Prior, probably the only one in the team who was as flashy as KP but surprise, surprise, likes repel! KP is clear that Matt was a buffoon who had limited talent and an unlimited ego, who was only interested in playing the political game and was the consummate 'jerk' - berating his own players when they misfielded (which I find quite rich since the only person to drop more catches than iron-gloves Prior was Pakistan's inept Kamran Akmal). KP lampoons Prior mercilessly and mocks his pompous habit of referring to himself as the Big Cheese, talking up his flashy lifestyle and his efforts to build a coterie of juniors around him. Prior's eventual downfall is something clearly relished by KP and he makes no efforts to hide it. Others to feel the wrath of KP include the nasty bowler's gang of Broad and Swann and the man who disappointed him the most, the milk-sop captain Alistair Cook. KP at last gives the lowdown of what happened in the last few tests of the Ashes, when after being hammered by the Aussies and Mitchell Johnson in particular, the team briefly raised the banner of revolt against Flower's gulag regime but in the end, they folded like umbrellas with Cook betraying his team mate to Flower and making him the scapegoat for the planned anti-Flower coup. There are many more snipes at the political structure of the ECB, which in KP's estimation, is run by non-entities who amounted to nothing in their playing careers but are now just interested in politics and career advancement in a manner which would make even the most canny operators in cut-throat corporates look like amateurs.As for the book, there is no pretence of this being an even-handed or objective assessment of what went wrong with the English cricket team - this is KP's side of the story and in quite a few incidents that are narrated, readers will find themselves straining to empathize with him. Despite that caveat, I still think this is a very enjoyable book for a number of reasons:1. Very few international cricketers write with the candour and the no-holds barred approach that is evident in this book. Hence, for most of us fans, the inner workings of the dressing room, the clash of egos and the dysfunctional relationships either remain hidden or at best are hinted at by a few magazines (these are then followed by prosaic 'everything is fine between us' denials)2. All of us have met and interacted with people like these at some point in our life. Like I said, this is not a book about cricket as much as a confessional about a dysfunctional workplace. We've all had bosses who were mediocre, supervisors who told bald-faced lies, the office suck-ups, the yes-men and all - this book is full of situations and people that most readers will be familiar with and the chances are very high that you'll recognize 2-3 personalities from your own life you absolutely abhor3. The overall tone of the book is quite honest - to the extent that I think it accurately portrays how KP felt about the incidents and instances mentioned here - and it's quite clear that in 90% of the cases, he felt the aggrieved party. For a man cast as the Ego Who Walks, in 10% of the case he admits quite openly that there were elements of his personality that many would not have liked, he admits he did things that he shouldn't have. KP is also brutally honest about his priorities in life and his approach to the game and the openness with which he talks about should give the reader a very good idea about the man's personality.Which brings me to my final point. At the end of the day, the discerning reader will clearly notice that in the KP vs the World battle, anything wrong that KP does is a genuine or an honest mistake, he can't help being who he is but almost everything that someone else does is put down to intended malice and diabolical plots hatched by dishonourable men. In what can be construed as paranoia worthy of Nero or Herod I, KP seems to believe that the entire cricket establishment in England, whether by volition or by accident formed a grand alliance to plot against him and bring him down. He was always the wronged party, the tall poppy being cut down by 'peers' who couldn't measure up to him. Yet, I find it hard to believe that KP could have fallen out with almost everyone who is anyone in English cricket without having some role to play - perhaps he downplays it, perhaps he is truly blind to it. I also think that many incidents might have been just stray comments or one-offs which have been weaved into this grand narrative of injustice. When your whole world revolves around yourself (and KP acknowledges that it does) you start thinking that everyone else's world revolves around you too. I would take the claims that there were secret meetings of shadowy figures plotting KP's downfall with quite a lot of pinch of salt. However, I truly believe that this was how KP saw things and more perceptive managers or captains would have noticed this and dealt with it in a more nuanced manner than English cricket's standard off with the non-conformist's head policy.Overall, this is a good book to get inside the mind of a maverick and a man who was obsessed with playing and living in his own way. Many readers will probably say that KP could have been more of a team man, could have gone along with the silly corporate style team bonding exercises and the team meetings without letting his disdain come through but still, I think it's worthwhile to hear his side of the story - which I presume was all he ever wanted when he set out to write this book.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. and yet it feels like it a story of a spoiled little boy trying ... By Billy Craven I am not sure that this book adds value to anything except KP's bank balance. Cricket does not benefit, and nobody will want to read it ten years from now. Such a talented sportsman, and yet it feels like it a story of a spoiled little boy trying to justify what happened. You don't need to, the statistics tell the story. KP lets have a book about cricket from a great player.

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KP: The Autobiography, by Kevin Pietersen

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