This book is not really about cricket. The match and the attempt to explain the rules give the story a strong sense of time and place as well as of contrasted ways of seeing events. The summer, the park, the house, and its rooms, and the other room, make boundaries of the ordinary in which things are going on, which threaten to shake apart lives that have grown together. The writing is personal, intimate, yet almost matter-of-fact in an English way. The relationships (the husband and wife, the wife and lover, the mother and son, the au-pair) are shown through activities that are real and intense. You get a strong sense of people living together, but, like the au-pair, from different cultures, operating under different rules. And although it could have been depressing, after all it's about a family breaking up, it is actually humorous, warm and positive. Since in fact it was written by a man, but told by a woman, I wonder if women like it, find it convincing?