Following the success of `Not Dark Yet', Mike Harfield's second book contains entertaining and informed accounts of a diverse selection of cricket tours, ancient and modern, professional and amateur. Harfield's Eleven includes the extraordinary story of the Aborigine tour of England in 1868, several famous epics including the West Indies in Australia in 1960/61 and Australia in India in 2000/01, and three adventures involving his own local club, Ash Tree CC in Cheshire. The author excels in setting each tour in a broad context, so, for example, we hear from Mandy Rice-Davies and Christine Keeler in 1963 and from Margaret Thatcher and Arthur Scargill in 1984. However, Harfield's love and knowledge of cricket shine through in all of his descriptions of the achievements, weaknesses and idiosyncracies of the many teams and players featured in the book, from immortals such as Trueman, Hammond and Viv Richards to mortals from Ash Tree CC. Always entertaining, this book is as satisfying as an all run four off Dennis Lillee in his prime.