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Fine Green Line: My Year of Golf Adventure on the Pro-Golf Mini-Tours

Fine Green Line: My Year of Golf Adventure on the Pro-Golf Mini-Tours

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Author: John Newport
Publisher: Broadway
Category: Book

List Price: $19.00
Buy Used: $0.05
You Save: $18.95 (100%)



New (19) Used (21) Collectible (1) from $0.05

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 28 reviews
Sales Rank: 641937

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 336
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.2 x 0.9

ISBN: 0767901177
Dewey Decimal Number: 796
EAN: 9780767901178
ASIN: 0767901177

Publication Date: May 2001
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Buy from the best: 4,000,000 items shipped to delighted customers. We have 1,000,000 unique items ready to ship today!

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - The Fine Green Line: My Year of Adventure on the Pro-Golf Mini-Tours
  • Kindle Edition - The Fine Green Line: My Year of Golf Adventure on the Pro-Golf Mini-Tours

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
Some stories regularly refresh themselves. The Walter Mittyesque tale of the dreamer chasing the dream is one of them. In The Fine Green Line, John Paul Newport's dream is a golf dream, and he relates it with good grace and humor, quite willing to analyze its inherent improbability and interpret the mysteries at its core. In his mid-30s, recently remarried, a new father, and playing to a handicap of less than 3, he sets out to focus on his game for a year, take his lumps on the minor-league tours, see how much he can improve, and finally test how he and his game stand up by trying to qualify for the PGA Tour via the murderous Q School tournament in the fall.

Like all worthwhile journeys, the destination is of less consequence than the trip itself. Newport's is a long and strange one, filled with small successes, big humiliations, reality checks, the kindness of strangers, and a colorful cast of wannabes on the golfing fringe, guys who live from week to week out of the back of their cars. Ultimately, Newport must come to terms with his own obsession with the game as he tries to figure out exactly where the fine green line of his title falls. He searches on and off the course for this abstract and invisible--and, he finally accepts, insurmountable--barrier that keeps the game's aristocracy on one side and those who can post the occasional 69 on the other. It's a search that takes him within himself and to anyone--such as Golf in the Kingdom's Michael Murphy, respected teaching pro Michael Hebron, swing doctors, and psychologists--who might be able to shed enlightenment, improve his swing, or focus his mind with laserlike intensity. It also sets off on some pretty memorable rounds of golf and the kind of grip-it-and-rip-it soul-searching that every hacker who's ever hit a ball with purpose--and shanked it anyway--is bound to understand. --Jeff Silverman

Product Description
What happens when a man leaves home for a year to pursue his dream?

One day, playing a particularly spectacular round of golf, husband and father John Paul Newport suddenly tastes what it?s like to be a pro. Deciding to take a year off and hit the road playing golf's mini-tour circuit, Newport embarks on a wild trip through America's fairways. Over the course of his journey inside the somewhat shady, often hilarious underbelly of professional golf, he uncovers a world of people so totally addicted to golf, to the delusion of achievable perfection, that they sacrifice everything else to the quest. He also discovers the nature of his own obsession with the game, and how this constant pursuit of perfection on the golf course reflects the same challenges and frustrations one encounters in life. What does it take to master such an intricate, unpredictable game? In golf, as in life, why is one so consistently incapable of acting up to one's clearly established potential?

As Newport struggles to cross that Fine Green Line--the infinitely subtle yet critical difference between the top golf professionals and those who never quite make it--he realizes that life, like golf, doesn't let you get away with anything. This is a story about letting go of fear, facing challenges, and embracing risks--a compelling personal journey that captures many of the frustrations and elations of midlife both on and off the course.



Customer Reviews:   Read 23 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Thinking and Golf   November 28, 2007
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

I am the author of Striking It Rich: Golf in the Kingdom with Generals, Patients and Pros, a similar but different take on the game of golf in general and the approach to Qualifying School in particular.
The Fine Green Line is a very well-written look at one low-handicapper's attempt to play professional golf on the mini-tour level. It is very funny because the author understands the problems he is having but despite many attempts, cannot solve them. It makes you want to work as his caddy in an event or two to set him straight. In this way, Newport draws you into his struggle by letting you know something the protagonist (Newport himself) does not.
I learned something about tournament golf from reading this book; namely that thinking about what you are doing out there is the key to playing well- not the source of your troubles, as Newport would have you believe. In "Striking It Rich", I tried to make that clear.



1 out of 5 stars Worst Golf Book Ever?   June 11, 2007
 1 out of 3 found this review helpful

This book is painful to read. Ending up skipping many paragraphs that were the author totally overanalyzing his swing or own mental state, as I wanted to finish the book figuring it would be fun to learn about the mini-tours -- golf's single-A leagues. Learned a little, but most of the book is the author self-flaggelating blather about his mental state, or lack thereof. Was hoping to hear about the background and dreams of the various cast of characters on the tours -- there might be five pages of that in a 300-page sleep-aid. Spends a full page explaining how his choice of socks ruined his round. This book is incorrectly titled. It should be "Fine Green Gap: The Pipe Dreams of a Three-Handicap and How He Got to Write a Book About It."


4 out of 5 stars A look at the frustrating game that avid golfers love.   November 26, 2006
I picked this book up with relish as I found myself relating well to it as I read the outside flaps. (I have a handicap index identical to that of the author's AND what avid golfer wouldn't love to take a year to work on their game in order to make a run at the PGA Tour.) Author John Paul Newport is presented with that opportunity when he gets a book deal to show the preparation and effort required to attempt to qualify for the PGA Tour via the Tour's qualifying school (or "Q School"). Along the way he expresses quite well all of the frustrations that vex golfers who try to master the game.

Starting with lessons, hours of practice, then new equipment, then participation in various "mini-tours" across the country, Newport succeeds in validating Grantland Rice's quote about golf that it is, "...twenty percent mechanics and technique. The other eighty percent is philosophy, humor, tragedy, romance, melodrama, companionship, camaraderie, cussedness, and conversation."

Along the way, the reader gets to experience all of Newport's ups and downs during what he refers to as "The Year" while trying to balance life with a new wife and a brand-new baby. He finds that his mental "game" is not quite as developed as his physical "game" as he doggedly pursues his goal. It's hard not to feel real sympathy for Newport as he struggles with all of the various facets of the game. The reader will go away from this book with a greater appreciation for the game of golf and the effort that goes into trying to master it.

Recommended for all golfers, but especially for those who ever aspired to play on the PGA or Senior Tours, in particular.



3 out of 5 stars Great beginning, but bogs down later in the book   April 11, 2006
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I really enjoyed the first 1/3 of this book, and laughed out loud many times while reading it. The writing is very lively and funny as he describes his obsession with golf, how he enjoys hitting balls anywhere he can (an open field, in the garage during the winter), how he was a late bloomer in golf, etc.

However, once the author gets into playing in the mini tours (about one third into the book) on through to the end of the book, it's not as humorous as he wrestles with the mental aspects of the game over and over and over and over (get the point?). If you're big into the mental side of golf and you're like the author and believe that motivational tapes will improve your game, you may like all the endless discussion about it. But I'm not into that, and I thought it really slowed down the book.

The book is also anticlimactic ... about half way through, you can kind of tell how it's going to end.

I did enjoy the book's explanations and inside stories of how the mini tours worked and the characters who play on the mini tours. But one of the final chapters of the book talked about him entering Q School, and he doesn't go into much depth about what that is all about. I would have liked to have read more inside details about Q school and how that works.

Overall, the good parts of this book are entertaining and many times hilarious, but the last two-thirds of the book would have benefitted from more humor, and less introspective analysis of the mental parts of his game.



3 out of 5 stars My Futile Aspirations Confirmed   November 4, 2004
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Anyone that loves golf and shoots a good round here and there has experienced the "why can't I do that every time" mentality. In "The Fine Green Line", John Newport takes that belief to the next level and puts into proper perspective the difficulty of "mastering" the addictive and occassionally rewarding game. I recommend this book for the regular or avid golfer who may be helplessly addicted and wants a humorous and very real account of just how mentally difficult consistently good golf can be.

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