|
Harvey Penick's Little Red Book | 
| Authors: Penick, Shrake Publisher: Prentice Hall & IBD Category: Book
List Price: £8.88 Buy New: £7.39 You Save: £1.49 (17%)
New (17) Used (22) from £1.24
Avg. Customer Rating: 11 reviews Sales Rank: 158812
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 175 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5 x 0.6
ISBN: 0684859246 Dewey Decimal Number: 796.352 EAN: 9780684859248 ASIN: 0684859246
Publication Date: May 24, 1999 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
|
| Also Available In:
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.co.uk Review The late Harvey Penick was one of the game's great teachers and his Little Red Book is one of the game's great inspirational motivators. Comprised of epigrams and anecdotes culled from the notes Penick took over a very long lifetime, it is filled with gentle prodding, practical swing advice, calming emotional counsel, a contagious love for the game and much good will and encouragement for golfers at every level. Before titanium drivers, before oversized heads and bubble shafts, before electronic systems to tell you how far you are from the pin, golf was much the same game it is today. The lessons Harvey Penick taught in the pre-gadget days still stand. The golf swing is basically the same and Penick could teach it better than anybody. For most of his life, he never intended to publish his Little Red Book, a notebook of golf wisdom and anecdotes that he compiled with the idea that he'd pass it on to his son. But, for the sake of history, it's a good thing that he changed his mind. Contained in its 175 pages is just about all you need to know about golf from a technical standpoint, along with Penick's priceless memories of working with famous pros, teaching absolute nobodies to get the ball in the air and finding a horde of bat manure and hauling it across town in a pickup truck to fertilise his golf course. This book makes you feel good about playing golf, that you're part of something steeped in ritual and mystery and tradition, and that the game was played perfectly well before perimeter-weighted, graphite-shafted irons came along.
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 6 more reviews...
absorbing, a must for new and seasoned golfers January 31, 2001 a great story by an old pro. golf taught in easy to understand language. his success stories with gentle BEN, how he taught DAVIS LOVE how to putt and win tournaments. how he enjoyed particulary teaching lady golfers. but never teach your wife to drive or play golf. A MUST READ.
Entertaining and helpful August 9, 1999 Maybe it's a coincidence, but I lost 10 strokes off my game during the week I read this book and put it into my practice routine. If you will actually practice the drills in this book your game will improve. If nothing else, it's entertaining reading!
Too much information for the beginning golfer. May 29, 1999 I understand that people will look at this and think of is as enjoyable but there are so many ideas of how to improve your game as to make it confusing. I would not suggest this book to a golfer unless he can already shoot in the high 80's or low 70's consistently.
Greatest golf book ever! April 20, 1999 Harvy doesn't explain the swing in a boring manner as most instructors do. Simple stories about real life people. After reading the red book I couldn't wait until the green and blue books were available to buy! No one does it as well as Harvy did!
To read it is to believe it ... This works for all March 13, 1999 I first read this book two years ago. I saw it on the shelf of my local book store and thought I would see if he could help where all others had failed. Two years and twelve strokes off my handicap later, I can honestly say his methods and teachings work. But this book is about more than fixing the problems of you golf game. This book is about life. If I had never improved my golf game one iota, I can say that I still got more from this book to help me with my personal life than I ever could from another self-help book. His teaching and his lifestyle were simple. His outlook on life had one important credo, "Take Dead Aim!" With his teachings and those words as my mantra, I have not only improved the quality of my golf game but I have improved the quality of my life. This book is a testament to the fact that not all things in life can be had by making more money than the other guy, but rather by finding what you like to do (play golf), work at being the best you can be (practice), and then treating others as you would be treated were you in their shoes. A must have for not only any golfer interested in improving their game, but for anyone. He says himself that these words are nothing more that the thoughts and teachings of an over-grown caddy, but beleive me this is one caddy with the wisdom that can only come from years being true to himself and the game he loved.
|
|
| | |