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The Mystery of Golf

Author: Arnold Haultain
Publisher: Classics of Golf
Category: Book

List Price: $33.00
Buy Used: $2.35
You Save: $30.65 (93%)



New (4) Used (15) from $2.35

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
Sales Rank: 3507788

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 152
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 1

ISBN: 0940889099
Dewey Decimal Number: 796
EAN: 9780940889095
ASIN: 0940889099

Publication Date: November 1987
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: No dust jacket. Book is GOOD with average wear to cover and pages. We offer a no-hassle guarantee on all our items. Orders generally ship by the next business day. Default Text

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - The Mystery of Golf
  • Hardcover - The Mystery of Golf
  • Hardcover - The Mystery of Golf
  • Paperback - The Mystery of Golf
  • Unknown Binding - The mystery of golf,

Similar Items:

  • Golf in the Kingdom (An Esalen Book)
  • Bernard Darwin On Golf (On)
  • Golf Dreams
  • How to Play Your Best Golf All the Time
  • The Match: The Day the Game of Golf Changed Forever

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
Originally published in 1908, The Mystery of Golf was the first book to seriously ruminate over that problematic region known as the golfer's mind and the obsessive hold the game has on it. Haultain suggests there are three unfathomables that have gripped the minds of men: metaphysics, golf, and the female heart. "The Germans, I believe, pretend to have solved some of the riddles of the first," he writes, "and the French to have unraveled some of the intricacies of the last; will someone tell us," he pleads almost rhetorically, "wherein lies the extraordinary fascination of golf?"

Of course, Haultain goes on to do just that, and John Updike, for one, raves about the effort. "The book's core," writes the prose master of Golf Dreams, "is pure gold.... Haultain goes to the heart of golf's peculiar loveability and enduring fascination." Much has changed in the game since Haultain penned this delightfully quaint tome, except for that elusive heart, which remains every bit as peculiar and enduring as it was when Haultain first opened it up for examination. --Jeff Silverman

Product Description
Written in 1908 by a Canadian belletrist who fancied himself a golfer, this classic treatise explores man's age-old love affair with golf - and pronounces it incurable. Just as a careful player sizes up a putt from all possible angles, so does Haultain examine this curious game, from the physiology of the perfect swing, to the psychology of a sport in which the opponent is oneself, to the peculiar brand of spirituality that leads people around eighteen holes with the promise of nothing more than "almost." THE MYSTERY OF GOLF may not help shave strokes off your game, but its delightful meditations on why we care so much make for "pure, evergreen entertainment" (Herbert Warren Wind).


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars All aspects of golf are poetically demystified to a degree   September 23, 2008
All the mysteries of golf are probed: physiological, physical, spirituality and the author does not forget to tell you to keep your head down and your eye on the the ball until the swing is completed. Words can only partly explain golf (the full experience of the mystery, of course can only be gained from actually playing) and this little book does that part extremely well.



4 out of 5 stars The Mystery of Golf   March 21, 2007
This book was written in 1908 and is largely philosophical about golf. However before one dismisses this as being `old-fashioned', this book contains many truths that today's golfers should reconsider as to what golf is really about. If your interest in golf lies beyond the technicalities of striking a pure shot this book will interest you - it talks about something that some old-timers, like myself, feel has been lost from the game. I found it well worth the time spent reading it.


3 out of 5 stars Reprint of a required text   June 8, 2005
The Mystery of Golf is one of the earliest (?) attempts to delve into the mystery of the game. His focus ranges from the physical to the psychological, and many of the observations Haultain makes have only been reproduced by later authors. He did, in many ways, set in motion our inquiries into what the game holds for us, and why we find ourselves on the course so often.

This edition is a reprint of the original. According to the afterword, a more extensive version printed for the popular press contained revisions and expansions on Haultain's ideas. Given that many of his views border on the provincial, if not clearly crossing the line, it may have been just as well that we were spared. However, it would have been nice to have included the more lucid portions of the expanded text. The integrity and "purity" of the original is intact, but at what expense most of us will be forever unaware.

Before delving into other works of fact or fiction on the lure of the links, this should be the starting point.



5 out of 5 stars Haultain's Comet   August 24, 2000
 4 out of 4 found this review helpful

As a golfer, have you ever wished that you could go back to the early 20th century, and play the game as it was played then? Does the smell of hickory and balata put you in mind of Ouimet, Vardon, Ray and Jones? What is it about golf that creates in its adherents a love for the game bordering on obsession? Settle down of an evening with Arnold Haultain's "The Mystery of Golf" and you shall have a very pleassant evening indeed. The book will make you long for those halcyon days of golf, from 1890 to 1930, when the golfiong heroes bestrode America and Britain like Titans. Read it, and then consider: Where is Haultain now, when we need him most?


5 out of 5 stars A classic in a neat new edition   April 18, 2000
 8 out of 9 found this review helpful

This little book, written in 1908, says everything that"Golf in the Kingdom" had to say 70 years later, but it saysit more clearly and succinctly. It is basically a love letter to golf -- don't look for instruction or anything like that. It captures the essence of golf without becoming as incomprehensible as a zen koan. The author was a Canadian scholar who took up golf in middle age and pondered why the game had become such an obsession. Despite the dissimilarity between the game in 1908 and the game today, it is amazing how many of the author's insights still hold true (virtually all of them, with the notable exception of his misguided belief that the game would never descend to the level of crass profesionalism). Even though he was not an accomplished player, he had a real understanding of and feel for the game... This has been compared to Izaak Walton's "The Compleat Angler," and you should be forewarned that the prose is sometimes archaic and demands careful reading. Anyway, if you've played golf for any length of time, you'll surely find this more worthwhile and enjoyable than the latest book of tips from some PGA nonentity.

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