The Test of My Life - Yuvraj Singh
My Rating: 5/5
When India won the first cricket World Cup in 1983, I was hardly 7 years old and had a vague memory of everyone celebrating something as if Diwali had come a bit early. Next time, when India won the World Cup, it was in 2011. My daughter was 5 years old, she had the same memory of us celebrating something in the dead of the night when the entire country was on the road shouting “Indiaaaaaa Indiaaaaaa” and waving the national flag, strangers hugging each other, nobody worried about the jammed traffic and whatnot. Now, this book was released in 2013 after Yuvraj Singh fought and beat cancer, but for some reason, I never got to read it. Finally, last week I decided I had to read the story of the “Player of the tournament” from the 2011 World Cup, whose contribution was priceless in helping India lift the same trophy after almost three decades. I still remember throughout the World Cup matches, he looked unwell, tired and kept on puking on the boundaries, but kept on playing to the best of his capabilities. News of his Cancer broke almost six months later, to the shock and amazement of all Indians as well as fans world over. But Yuvi, the man who holds the record of six sixes in an over and still I believe holds the record of fastest 50 in a T20 game, cannot be beaten by anything, let alone Cancer. This book is written in his own words, even the tone feels as if he is talking to the reader in his own style, as much as we have seen his histrionics on the ground and have heard so much through those wicket mikes, he actually sounds so much himself in its entirety.
Unfortunately, we too have lost two aunts in the last few years, and one of my brothers-in-law is a survivor, much younger than me but fully cured. So I can claim to partially know the pain one goes through while fighting the dreaded disease, especially what happens to the family of the same person and how life changes upside down in the snap of a finger. The book covers the whole thing in a very simple way from the moment he starts feeling uncomfortable, way before the World Cup starts, but decides not to go for a check-up because he has no time but to practice and make sure this time we win it. What he prays to God for is something you should read the book for, and how it all comes true was totally unbelievable, heart-touching, yet so inspiring. The way he fought the battle, travelling from India to the UK to the US of A and finally back to India, was seriously inspiring. The book is full of some two dozen coloured pictures, too, from his childhood to current times, which again are a collector’s item, especially for his fans. The book is hardly 200 pages, very easy to read, but the weight that it carries, it actually took me a good 4-5 days to come to terms with the pain he was going through and how beautifully he has worded the same, never going overboard but always keeping it straightforward. I was already a huge Yuvi fan, but after reading this, his respect in my eyes has gone up by a few notches for sure. I consider myself lucky to have seen him in person in Pune while he played in IPL against my favourite Dada (Saurav Ganguly), it was a dream come true moment for me to see both of them in one frame with cute Preity Zinta around them :).
Of course, the book is based on his fight with the disease, but I expected it to give some in-depth stories on his playing style and other stuff. Like I expected a bit of explaining why he wasn’t a great when it came to facing spinners and why he never super succeded in Test Cricket, but I let it be for some other day. Overall its a terrific book and a must-read for all sports lovers, especially cricket and Yuvraj Singh fans. Do let me know if you have read it and loved it, or if you, too, felt something was missing in the book. Next, I am looking forward to reading “Last Ball Six”, the story of the 2011 World Cup victory, at the earliest, at least before we play the next World Cup in 2027.




