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   Book Info

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Letters to a Young Golfer  
Author: Bob Duval
ISBN: 1402895194
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review
Letters to a Young Golfer

FROM OUR EDITORS

Who could do a better job of imparting wisdom and inspiration to young golfers? PGA Senior Tour member Bob Duval, father of PGA star David Duval, shares his years of experience with the next generation of golfers in Letters to a Young Golfer, a unique collection of correspondence that will uplift and instruct young readers. Duval's advice, which blends golf tips with guidelines for living, includes reflections on the nature of his beloved game.

FROM THE PUBLISHER

From the father, teacher, and mentor of David Duval, the 2001 British Open winner, comes this meditation on the game of golf and what it can teach you about the game of life

Since his own boyhood growing up on the links in upstate New York, Bob Duval has lived the life of golf in all its incarnations—as student, mentor, teacher, playing professional, and, more recently, as proud parent of a star player on the PGA Tour. Whether telling a story about his son David playing with Tiger Woods or revealing the secret of hitting a long bunker shot, he has always shown a remarkable ability to find an emotional and highly personal resonance when communicating with other people. This book celebrates that ability with an inspirational collection of letters about golf and the joy and passions it arouses.

In Letters to a Young Golfer, Duval writes to David, sharing not only his wisdom as a golfer and a father but also expressing his bond with David as a friend and fellow professional. Other letters address golfers of every age and ability who seek to improve their game, from Sunday amateurs to seasoned Tour professionals. With stories from his own career playing with and observing golfers both famous and unknown, Duval goes beyond the sport and explores what it means to live a fuller life. Finally, he writes to his deceased father and probes the spiritual mysteries of golf, this sometimes maddening, always exhilarating game that has been a healing force in his life.

New in the Art of Mentoring Series

From Letters to a Young Golfer:

The first time I played in a Senior PGA Tour major championship, I cold-topped my first drive. The ball landed in a cactus plant, where it was unplayable, so I had to retrieve it. As I walked back to hit another drive, the starter raised his voice to the gallery: "Now at the first tee—for the second time—Bob Duval."

When I was teaching David to play golf, I used to tell him, "Your score is just a succession of numbers. Don't add them up until your round is done." I say the same to you: Don't dwell on the past. Play the next shot.

Author Biography: Bob Duval joined the Senior PGA Tour in 1996, after nearly thirty years as a teacher and golf pro in Northern Florida. In 1999 he won the Emerald Coast Classic, his first win, on the same day that his son David won the Players Championship on the PGA Tour. He is a playing editor for Golf Digest magazine. He lives in Ponte Vedra, Florida. Carl Vigeland is the author of several books, including, with Wynton Marsalis, Jazz in the Bittersweet Blues of Life. He has written about golf and many other subjects for such magazines as Golf Digest, Playboy, The Atlantic Monthly, Fast Company, and DoubleTake. He lives in Massachusetts.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

Both the father and the son of pro golfers, and a golf instructor and Senior PGA pro in his own right, Bob Duval shares the wisdom he's accumulated from years on the course in Letters to a Young Golfer. The book takes the form of actual letters to his son, David a PGA celebrity and 2001 British Open champion and to other friends and family members. The subject on the table is usually golf Duval muses about strategies and looks back on his own career and encounters with PGA luminaries but through the letters a more intimate history of the family emerges, including the father and son's long estrangement, sparked by the death of David's older brother. (May) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Golf (and life) tips from a member of the PGA Senior Tour and father of PGA talent David Duval. Tendered here are pinches of wisdom gleaned from years as a golf pro, then forged under some difficult circumstances. Written in the form of a collection of letters Duval sent to his family and friends, it all seems a bit forced: Did he really need the helping hand of professional sportswriter Vigeland (Stalking the Shark, 1996, etc.) to pen a letter? Did he truly send a 225-word postcard? The correspondence's stilted language ("Well, we played pretty good, didn't we? Twenty-one under par for two rounds but we finished third") doesn't help. Duval's counsel is sensible if timeworn: have focus, don't let your mistakes get you down, be resilient, move forward. "Play what's in front of you," he says to golfer and everyman alike. "If I hit a bad shot￯﾿ᄑand I hit plenty of them, everyone does￯﾿ᄑI immediately start putting it behind me, because you never know what may happen next." Midway through, when readers will have had enough of "believe in yourself and give whatever it is you dream of a chance," Duval abruptly shifts gears to chronicle his eldest son's death at age 12 from aplastic anemia. His loss crushed Duval, who started drinking, abandoned his family, came back a hollow man, left again, and then slowly rebuilt his life and his relations with his two remaining children. Suddenly, the emphasis on developing a routine, moving forward, playing the hand dealt you, makes a whole lot of sense. And our new knowledge about Duval definitely puts the importance of a game of golf into mighty perspective. Well-meaning advice and certainly hard-won, but the gist could fit onto a postcard. Author tour

     



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