Description
A meditation on what makes golf courses compelling landscapes, this is also a personal memoir that follows Klein's own unique journey across the golfing terrain, from the Bronx and Long Island suburbia to the American prairie and the Pacific Northwest. Whether discussing Robert Moses and Donald Trump and the making of New York City, or the role of golf in the development of the atomic bomb, or the relevance of Willa Cather to how the game has taken hold in the Nebraska Sandhills, Klein is always looking for the freedom and the meaning of golf's wide-open spaces. And as he searches, he offers a deeply informed and absorbing view of golf courses as cultural markers, linking the game to larger issues of land use, ecology, design, and imagination.
Purchase the audio edition.
Author: Bradley S. Klein
Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
Published: 09/01/2013
Pages: 196
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 1.06lbs
Size: 9.14h x 6.44w x 0.81d
ISBN13: 9780803240377
ISBN10: 0803240376
BISAC Categories:
- Sports & Recreation | Golf
About the Author
Bradley S. Klein is architecture editor of Golfweek magazine and runs its national golf course rating system. He is a former PGA Tour caddie and has been inducted into the International Caddie Hall of Fame. He lectures widely to professional trade groups throughout the United States and overseas on topics of golf design, the golf development industry, and golf course operations and maintenance. Klein is the author of the definitive Discovering Donald Ross: The Architect and His Golf Courses and most recently Rough Meditations: From Tour Caddie to Golf Course Critic, An Insider's Look at the Game. He was named 2015 Donald Ross Award winner by the American Society of Golf Course Architects.