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Fairway to Hell: Around the World in 18 Holes | 
enlarge | Author: Franz Lidz Publisher: ESPN Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy New: $14.39 You Save: $10.56 (42%)
New (31) Used (8) from $14.39
Avg. Customer Rating: 8 reviews Sales Rank: 120331
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 240 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.3 x 0.9
ISBN: 1933060433 Dewey Decimal Number: 796.352 EAN: 9781933060439 ASIN: 1933060433
Publication Date: April 29, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: BRAND NEW
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| Customer Reviews: Read 3 more reviews...
Effortlessly funny July 17, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Mr. Lidz is as superbly nonsensical as ever. He will continue to release future generations from captivity that may be more annoying than our own. He has made a world for us to live in and delight in.
Better than most May 29, 2008 0 out of 3 found this review helpful
This book contains a very nice balance of the real spirit of golf and the fun side of golf. Some of the chapters are questionable but others are touching and funny at the same time. The author has found the right people to show how deep this game can go into the human condition. But unlike other books that try to do the same, this one avoids taking itself too seriously. Most books of this type just plain fail. This one does not and deserves attention. Seriously, a mini-golf marathon in Myrtle Beach, sign me up.
Hitting The Sweet Spot May 5, 2008 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
There's a moment in every golfer's life that we remember forever. It belongs to that period after a perfect swing, when the sweet spot of the driver has met the ball with a thick, solid click. The ball screams off the tee on a low, rising climb, and just in the last quarter of its flight when you think it might start falling, the spin you've put on it bites into the air and the ball lifts, climbing more steeply and slowly in a last flare of energy. And then you get the moment, when the flight of the ball connects with the feeling of the strike and the two have travelled up the club, through your arms and shoulders and into your heart. I got much the same feeling after finishing this funny, funny book.
A sharp and subtle voice May 4, 2008 8 out of 9 found this review helpful
Lidz is a true satirist with an eye for the ridiculous, the bogus and the vain. He is deeply skeptical about many things and his humor can be savagely cutting, but I do not think it is ever cruel. He is hard but fair. It is encouraging to find that he has lost none of the wickedly sharp powers of observation that have distinguished his work in the New York Times.
A side-splitting report from the bunker April 29, 2008 8 out of 8 found this review helpful
The thing about this golf memoir is that you don't even have to like the game to enjoy it. You certainly don't have to understand it. Lidz' golfing descriptions of duffers on the tee fussing about like a hen scratching gravel, or teasing the ball like a cat investigating a tortoise speak eloquently enough of character to enchant anybody. I can't state with confidence the function of a spoon or a brassie, but the point is that the vocabulary of the links fits the author's style like the paper on the wall, particularly in the chapter on a tournament in a nudist colony: "Nudists mostly avoid risque repartee. But pack 30 of them on a tight course, and the ricocheting double entendres are inescapable. "It's long, real long." "It's not that long, is it?" "Believe me, it's long." "Did you stay up, Sam? Please tell me you stayed up." "Yeah, I'm up." "Pam, can you loosen up on your grip?" "Stroke it a little more gently, Al." "He jumps on Len's misses every chance he gets." "By golly, what I wouldn't give for another three inches." "If you'd been straight, Sam, that puppy would have gone in."
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