Rating: Summary: Every sports fan should read this book Review: It would not be exaggerating to say that this is not only the best golf book ever written, but one of the best sports books ever. Feinstein captures the drama of life on the PGA tour, telling the stories, not only of the "glamour" players, but also of those who have to make shots when their livelihood is at stake. I finished the book with a new respect for the only professional athletes who have no guarantees, receive no appearance fees, and must depend on only themselves for their living.
Rating: Summary: Thoughts from a Golf Disciple Review: The best golf book ever written. It transported me into the minds and soul of some of my favorite professional golfers and made me realize that they are as human as the weekend warrior. As for the "June 4, 1997" comment, I have a reply: ...Bite My Titleist!!!!
Rating: Summary: Great Golf Book Even for the Non-Golfer Review: This is not a technical book, but rather an interesting story about the lives of a handful of professional golfers. This story puts into perspective the stress of competing every week for both the big names and the lessor known names. A wonderful humanistic story that is a real page turner. As a side note, the book does an excellent job at explaining how the PGA Tour works. A great read!
Rating: Summary: a completely absorbing look at professional athletes Review: This book is a fascinating look at the professionals on the golf tour - it personalizes for us the cast of characters we see on the TV at each weekend tournament. Necessarily it gives many insights into how the pros cope - or don't cope - with the frustrations and anxieties that anyone with any golf experience has had if he or she has ever swung a club more than one time. There are scenes that fill one with the same anxieties you look for in a spine-tingling mystery; and there are others in which you are nearly as dissolved in tears as the subjects are. In its heart A GOOD WALK SPOILED is about people and emotions, and the struggle for identity. Every reader will find themselves on these pages. It's a book you hardly want to end.
Rating: Summary: Great Book Review: This book was awsome. At first i did not know if i would like it or not but immediatly i fell in love with it. If you like golf i would rate this a definite buy. This has to be one of the best book i have ever read
Rating: Summary: Oustanding book about golf,competiton and life on tour. Review: This book was very enjoyable and fascinating. I love golf but even more I love to compete. This book hit the spot. Feinstein said all the right words and told all the right stories. This book made you laugh and cry, Feinstein got into the lives of the characters so well I felt as if I've known them my whole life. This was the most intresting golf book I've ever read. At age 15, I recommend this book to golfers and competitors of all ages. If you are going to read a golf book, this is the best there is!
Rating: Summary: Not terribly interesting Review: I was looking forward to reading this book, but it turns out to be not very interesting. The book is (almost always) better than the movie, but in this case, I'd rather watch golf on tv. Now, if only someone at NPR would read this book and realize that it does not deserve free plugs after every sports report the author does.
Rating: Summary: Best golf book ever written! Review: I laughed, I chuckeld, my throat would swell with emotion as I read this truly entertaining book. I don't think you need to be an avid golfer, or even a golfer to enjoy this wonderful book. Mr. Feinstein makes it feel as if your with the players and part of them. The candid comments allow us to see the human side of these great athletes, their hopes and dreams, their sorrows and tragedies. I have read the book twice, and quoted it to others so often I can't remember. In fact, I loaned this book out so many times to other golfers, I have lost track of the last "borrower". All of those who have borrowed it, bought there own copy to enjoy themselves -- again! Thats when I get my copy back. What more can be said? If you want to give a wonderful gift to your golfer, or just someone interested in the game....this is it. Thank you Mr. Feinstein...A wonderful piece of work, and destined to be a golf classic
Rating: Summary: Not worth the time or effort to read Review: Although the book recounts several interesting little stories, most of the book is boring, trite, and without much substance. The author tries to make golf sound interesting and stimulating, but ends up putting the reader to sleep.
Not very well written, but is interesting only to those who are contemplating joining the PGA tour, not those of us who are interested in the game of golf.
Rating: Summary: Golfing Gossip at a Grinding Pace Review: I guess I am the only reviewer who found this book tedious and banal. It's more a series of thumbnail biographies of pga tour players, linked together through weekly accounts of pga tour stops, than anything else. Feinstein's writing seems to move along at a brisk enough pace, but after several chapters, I found one event starting to blend into the next, one Q school qualifier after another, one harrowing tournament finish after another, and so on, and so on. Feinstein's writing verges on being formulaic- it's all written in a sort of breathless, anxiety filled pace, as the nail biting details of who's missing the cut, who's choking under pressure, whose marriage is on the rocks, who's in danger of returning to Q school all gets mixed together in a swill of golf gossip and insider minutia.
What I found missing in this harried chronicle is any sign of the transcendental joy that marks golf at it's best. It's almost as if Feinstein writes to show us how miserable and unbearably tense the world of professional golf is.
While some of the details he provides are interesting, overall I found the book repetitive and lacking in the sort of poetry that the best sports writing sometimes achieves.
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