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Loading... The Greatest Game Ever Played (2002)by Mark Frost
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. This is a powerful story beautifully told. I came to it after seeing the movie which, disappointingly, diminished the roles of the British players Harry Vardon and Ted Ray. This is a beautiful and illuminating book. Anyone with an interest in golf will appreciate this work. Frost gives a vivid portrait of an epic battle between some of the first real great characters of the game. I was much more familiar of Harry Vardon and Ted Ray than I was of Francis Ouimet before acquiring the book. The prose style in the book assists the reader and the description of the game of golf is very realistic and in parts very moving. The final chapter of the book also gives a description of the fate of each of the main protagonists. Fantastic. I love narrative history and this is one of the finest examples I've come across. Brings the early days of golf in America to life - at times it felt as though I was in the gallery watching the drama unfold. When I read Francis' words to Eddie when they were alone in the locker room after the tournament, well I got so choked up I had to stop reading for a while. If you have the slightest interest in the game of golf, you will love this book. The reason why this book was significant to me is because golf has always been part of my life. I've grown up with two parents who play golf regularly, and I started playing golf when I was about 6 years old. Since I was that young, my parents taught me that the game of golf is more about the life lessons you learn from it than the competition of the sport. The game tells you about yourself and other people. The etticate and self discipline that it involves certainly differentiate the character of people. no reviews | add a review
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THE GREATEST GAME EVER PLAYED is the story of Francis Ouimet and Harry Vardon, who in pursuit of their passion for a game that captivated them as children, broke down rigid social barriers that made their sport accessible to everyone on both sides of the Atlantic and beyond, positioning golf as one of the most widely played games in the world. Ouimet and Vardon were two men from different generations and vastly different corners of the world whose lives, unbeknownst to them at the time, bore remarkable similarities, setting them on parallel paths that led with a kind of fated inevitability to their epic battle at Brookline years in the future. This collision resulted in the big bang' that gave rise to the sport of golf as we know it today. For Mark Frost, Francis Ouimet and Harry Vardon represent everything that's right about sports in general and sportsmen in particular; gentlemen, champions, teachers, leaders, and each in their own quiet way, heroes. In THE GREATEST GAME EVER PLAYED, Frost attempts to create penetrating studies of both of these men, along with over dozens of the game's seminal figures, within the dramatic framework offered by the tournament when they finally met, one of the most thrilling sports events in history, the 1913 U.S. Open. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)796.352Arts & recreation Sports, games & entertainment Athletic and outdoor sports and games Ball sports Ball and stick sports GolfLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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