Description:
There's a reason Herbert Warren Wind earned the appellation "the dean of American golf writers." The only scribe ever honored by the United States Golf Association for distinguished contributions to the game, the long-time New Yorker staffer related to the royal and ancient endeavor both intimately and encyclopedically, analyzing and reporting on the players, personalities, events, highlights, lowlights, and advances in technique with a fluid mix of style and grace, insight and understanding. In the late 1940s, he compiled this monumental history of the game, from its touchdown on American shores in the 1880s to the outbreak of World War II. It remains the single most comprehensive and authoritative chronicle of golf west of the Atlantic through those formative and colorful years. Twice updated and long out of print, The Story of American Golf now gets the literary equivalent of a well-struck mulligan. As part of an elegant new series called The Callaway Golfer, this splendid edition raids golf's photo archives--the book was text only in its earlier incarnations--to add faces to a marvelous cast of characters. C.B. MacDonald, Walter Hagen, Walter Travis, Francis Ouimet, Bobby Jones, Gene Sarazen, Glenna Collett Vare, Byron Nelson, Ben Hogan, and Sam Snead are just a few of the heavy hitters whose stories and accomplishments Wind puts into perspective with fine detail and sophisticated analysis. A must-have for any serious student of the game, The Story of American Golf is so beckoningly attractive, it's likely to spend far more time on the coffee table inspiring dreams than on the shelf. --Jeff Silverman
|