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The Caddie Who Played with Hickory | 
enlarge | Author: John Coyne Publisher: Thomas Dunne Books Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy New: $12.29 You Save: $12.66 (51%)
New (33) Used (15) from $10.21
Rating: 7 reviews Sales Rank: 109686
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 336 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 8.4 x 5.8 x 1.4
ISBN: 0312372442 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9780312372446 ASIN: 0312372442
Publication Date: April 29, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
Before there were titanium woods and graphite shafts, golf clubs were made from the wood of hickory trees and had intriguing names like cleek, mashie and jigger. Golf was a game played not with high-tech equipment but with skill, finesse, and creativity. And the greatest hickory player of all time was Walter Hagen---until the day he met a teenage caddie at a country club outside Chicago. America’s first touring golf professional, Hagen made (and spent) more prize money than his friends Babe Ruth and Jack Dempsey earned from baseball and boxing during the Golden Age of Sports. In this novel, set in the halcyon post-war Midwest of 1946, Hagen comes to historic Midlothian Country Club as the champion he is---but also as a man handicapped by a secret. Waiting for him are two caddies. Harrison Cornell—a onetime rich playboy from the Bahamas—has a past; the other---Tommy O’Shea, a farm boy who caddies at the country club---may have a future . . . but only if he can somehow beat Hagen on the links, in one last game played with hickory. Cornell is a mystery man who appears from nowhere and presents himself as a “looper,” a professional caddie. Soon everyone sees that he has a gift---within weeks he has improved the games of dozens of members. Only Tommy O’Shea, his eager pupil, knows Cornell’s real motive for coming to the club: his grudge against Walter Hagen, over something that happened during the Second World War in the lovely paradise known as the Bahamas. As the playboy and the farm boy become friends, Harrison teaches Tommy the secrets of playing golf with hickory, along with lessons in life and love. But the shadow of Hagen, and the upcoming match, fall across the Midwest summer, and as the competition nears, Tommy’s hopes for the future---and his love for a member’s daughter---are threatened when the truth about Harrison’s past is revealed. Not until the climax, played out in an exciting shot-for-shot match, will all the questions be answered and all the scores settled. As in his previous novel, The Caddie Who Knew Ben Hogan, author John Coyne has created a world rich in characters, action, and golf lore---this time including the fascinating history of hickory play. An entertaining, suspenseful read for anyone who loves the game, it is also a book that offers a pure dose of Midwestern soul, written by a new voice in golf literature who has firmly established himself as one of the leaders of the genre.
Praise for The Caddie Who Played with Hickory:
"A highly entertaining must-read for anyone interested in hickory golf or the history of the game. I loved it!" -- Randy Jensen, 7-time National Hickory Golf Champion
"John Coyne knows his golf history, its characters and the game. He spins a story that includes a mysterious character, a hero, a romance, a semi-villain, and a classic golf match into a believable tale." -- Dr. Gary Wiren, noted golf teacher, and former Director of Research and Learning for the PGA of America
“The legendary Walter Hagen, Chicago’s greatest amateur golfer, Chick Evans, hickory clubs and Chicago’s Midlothian Country Club are all featured in this tense story of championship golf and summer romance. John Coyne spins a tale so involving, the reader is in enjoyable suspense about the outcome of every putt.” -- Jerry Dudek, Director of Development, Evans Scholars Foundation/Western Golf Association
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| Customer Reviews: Read 2 more reviews...
Really.... July 29, 2008 Graduating high school in 1954 and being a Hogan fanatic that learned the game with a copy of POWER GOLF in one hand I kept kept a clipping book of on him from 1950-1954. Only saw him play once but what he he could do with a wound balata ball and persimmon club with steel shafts was simply amazing. Its hard not to read anything thing with him in it. But really, a teen angst advisor. Okay, John, you got my $15 bucks by using his name but you should be ashamed of yourself and donate the money to a caddie's educational fund or something.
Great Read! July 16, 2008 What a great read! If you are a golf historian, you will love the detail Coyne includes here. Beyond that, though, the story is just as much about life and coming of age as it is golf. It had me turning the pages quickly, and readers of all backgrounds and interests will enjoy it.
Terrific book June 29, 2008 Coyne's done it again. I've read the first of this series and really enjoyed it, so I tried the second. Enjoyed it so much, now waiting for a third -- hopefully.
What I know about golf is that I get out there and try with each swing to get the ball closer to the pin. I also know there are so many who are so much better than I am. What the Coyne books do is reveal, sometimes in great detail, just what they're doing that I'm not doing and what they know that I don't know. (Bottom line -- they're playing a different game.)
You're not a golfer? Doesn't matter. If you're curious about professionals in any 'game' and what it means to be a professional you'll love this book. All the detail is enthralling and engaging because it all moves the story closer to the finish line.
You're in for a great read no matter your interest in golf. I don't know how he does it either, but Coyne manages to use golf as a way to tell a great story of love.
Not just for golfers May 29, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I have never played a round of golf, barely followed the game before Tiger Woods. I even watch a little on TV these days, though I have been known to use the cliche that watching the grass grow was the most exciting part of golf on TV.
Coyne's first novel, The Caddie Who Knew Ben Hogan, was recommended to me. I liked it more than I expected. The story drew me in, but most surprising was getting a sense of what golfers are actually doing out there and why it hooks people. All I knew about Ben Hogan was that he was a golf giant from the past. It all came together in a very nice read. I gave the book as a gift to golfer friends, but also to a few nongolfers who I thought would enjoy an entertaining read.
Coyne's new book takes on a different golf hero, Walter Hagen, a known but less familiar name to me than Hogan. (Hagen? Hogan? Who's next?) The story is entertaining, the golf and Hagen lore are interesting even to a non-golfer. Best of all, Coyne has set up the tale to end in a dramatic, hole-by-hole final round of golf that gets all the characters on the course, just as he did in the caddie-Hogan book. A very entertaining read even for people like me who will probably never go beyond the bar at a golf club. But I watch golf on TV with different eyes these days.
On in one May 28, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is a book about caddying and golf and golf's history and includes a pretty heated romance and a cameo appearance by golf legend Chick Evans. Which I loved because I learned how to golf at the Chick Evans public course on Chicago's North Side. People who aren't necessarily interested in golf shouldn't overlook this book because the book is about a lot more than that. First and foremost, the book explores the class divide between the haves and the haves not in Post WWII Chicago in a way that offers a commentary on our own times. And Coyne also writes very well about first love and passion on those summer nights of our youth which we all remember, and yearn for still. Coyne's women are three dimensional and sexy, the caddies who long for them mysterious and haunted by what they saw in the war. And then there's a whole lot of golf. I knew nothing about the game pre-steel shafts, am thinking of taking a swing with a hickory stick myself. A minor footnote to all of this is how the book chronicles the ways in which environmental change shape our lives. When hickory became scarce in the earlier part of the century due to over-harvesting, golf clubs and a lot of other things besides (for example drumsticks...in fact many ballroom songs of 20's included references to "hickory sticks") became a thing of the past. Coyne takes us back there through this story about a caddie and his triumph over not only the notorious Walter Hagen on the links, but over the high wall of class division.
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