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Hit & Hope: How the Rest of Us Play Golf

Hit & Hope: How the Rest of Us Play Golf

List Price: $22.00
Your Price: $14.96
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Experience the Joy --- and Frustrations --- of Golf
Review: Subscribers to Golf Digest are well aware of David Owen. A monthly contributor to that magazine, as well as to the New Yorker, Owen is also the author of several golf books, including MY USUAL GAME, THE CHOSEN ONE and THE MAKING OF THE MASTERS. David Owen may well be the closest thing we have to an American version of P.G. Wodehouse, the English golf writer.

HIT AND HOPE: How the Rest of Us Play Golf, is a collection of Owen's essays. While many may find comfort in reading about golfing greats, Owen is not the writer to read if that is your interest. David Owen is the golf everyman, writing for those of us who go from despair to jubilation and back to despair in the span of one 385-yard hole. David Owen is a golfer who understands why a round of golf that often begins with unbounded optimism can conclude with total despair. He understands because, like us, he has been there and done that.

From an early essay explaining why Casablanca is the greatest golf movie ever made, to a discussion centering on golf superstitions, to a delightful tale of grown men sleeping over on the golf course, David Owen captures the true meaning and attraction of the game of golf. Golf is more than major championships, Tiger Woods, Jack Nicklaus, and the legends of golf. Golf is camaraderie, fellowship, and the dreams of the average golfer who firmly believes deep down in his heart that one small adjustment in the swing will cause handicaps to plummet and scores to approach par. Like Owen, we can dream the dream while understanding that it remains an elusive, unattainable objective.

There is something in this collection to entertain every golfer. In "Perfecting Skins," Owen discusses the popularity of the made-for-television golf event, the Skins Game. In that event, four well-known professional golfers play for a large amount of money. There is little actual drama in the television contest, because the four golfers have nothing to lose except the possible humiliation of failing to win a single skin over the two-day event. It is fairly boring golf. Owen has several suggestions for livening up the event and then proceeds to discuss the local version of the skins game that you might wish to try out with your foursome. There are some interesting possibilities for those of you inclined to wager a few dollars on your weekend round of golf.

The longest essay in the collection is "The Greenkeeper's Tale," a short biography of the course superintendent at Owen's home course. Bob Witkoski is an iconoclast whose methods are subject to much discussion. A United States Golf Association agronomist who visited the course was horrified to learn that Witkoski refused to aerify the greens of his course. Upon examining a sample of the greens, he was forced to acknowledge that the soil was some of the healthiest ground he had ever seen. Bob Witkoski is a man who loves his work and his golf course, and Owen has chronicled him in an extraordinary fashion.

Read HIT AND HOPE and experience the joy of golf. Pass it amongst your foursome and share its joy. Owen would be mortified to learn that golfing pals might take the time to read and then discuss a book. Read his essay "Feelings" and you will understand why. This is a tome for golfers who know the frustration of the game. There are a lot more of us than there are golfers like Woods, Nicklaus and Palmer. Along with David Owen, we can share the joy, anguish and mirth of the game.

--- Reviewed by Stuart Shiffman


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