The Links This exact reprint of The Linksbelongs in the libraries of all aficionados of golf course architecture.Students of golf course architecture are well aware of Robert Hunter — and it’s all because of The Links. This
TITLE | : | The Links |
AUTHOR | : | |
RATING | : | 4.54 (487 Votes) |
ASIN | : | 1886947511 |
FORMAT TYPE | : | Hardcover |
NUMBER of PAGES | : | 196 Pages |
PUBLISH DATE | : | 1999-03-29 |
GENRE | : |
Students of golf course architecture are well aware of Robert Hunter — and it’s all because of The Links. This scholarly work was different from other architecture books of the day because Hunter was not a designer attempting to attract commissions through his writing. His goal — through the use of detailed drawings, contemporary photographs and thoughtful text — was not only to explain what made the classic holes so great but why they would stand the test of time. This exact reprint of The Linksbelongs in the libraries of all aficionados of golf course architecture.
Editorial : Robert Hunter partnered with the legendary designer Alistair McKenzie on such classic courses as Cypress Point. The Links, first published in 1926, is his elegantly written paean to golf course design, and it remains a Fort Knox of golfing knowledge. Hunter explains and extols the glories of a good golf course, what makes that course good, the thinking that goes into individual holes to make them interesting, and, in the end, the wisdom that puts all of it together to create a fair test for the golfer. Understanding the hows and whys of the demonic challenges that designers subtly and not so subtly integrate into their layouts will certainly save an observant golfer a stroke or two. And high-handicappers who have heretofore communed with the game primarily through their ignorance can now get on the long cart path to enlightenment. --Jeff Silverman
I definitely put on the "must-haves" for strength training alongside Stuart McRobert's books.
Brzycki has done a great job in assembling top notch experts in the field of strength training. I have every book he ever published; every damn one of them is a trip to read, like you're sitting in a bar with this great storyteller and he cannot stop talking - and you don't want him to! Bob was a great storyteller, and this one about the first-ever Greenpeace voyage (indeed, before there even was a Greenpeace!) is as good as anything he ever wrote. Along the way his tongue-in-cheek prose makes for a very interesting read. The author had me totally engrossed and I could not wait to turn the page. While being as good or better than David Mamet is not a necessary objective in itself, a hell of a task at that, bringing to the page the smooth articulate thoughts, observations and understan
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