I'll Take the Sunny Side
I’ll Take the Sunny Side is a memoir about many things – tennis, friendship, storytelling and growing older. Gordon Forbes, acclaimed author of A Handful of Summers and Too Soon to Panic, has joined seven friends for the seniors’ lunch in the Rainbow Room at the Country Club for several years. They are a group of learned men, writers, scholars and ex-editors, this book arises from their meandering conversations. You might know some of the table: James, the born humourist; Mark, the headmaster; Tim and Charles, the historians; two Peters who have edited newspapers; Richard, an author and editor; and Gordon, the tennis player. Join them as they debate politics, books and sport in particular. Is television affecting the antics of modern sportsmen? How many oysters is enough to make a difference? What has happened to tennis, has the nobility of the game gone for good?
Gordon Forbes
Gordon Forbes was born in 1934 on a farm near Burgersdorp in the Eastern Cape, South Africa. He grew up playing tennis with his siblings, and became one of South Africa’s most consistent post-war champions, winning a total of ten national titles. He played for South Africa in Davis Cup competitions and with his great friend Abe Segal, became one of the world’s best doubles combinations. Together, they won the British Hard Courts twice and reached the finals of the French Championships and the semi-finals of Wimbledon.
- • Finally, a new instalment of Gordon Forbes’s memoir!
- • Simultaneous publication alongside the reissue of Forbes’s classic, A Handful of Summers, originally published in 1978.
- • A touching tribute to Abe Segal, Forbes’s lifelong friend and tennis companion.