The definitive account of modern golf's foremost architect from the "New
York Times "bestselling author of "First Man: The Life of Neil A.
Armstrong "
Robert Trent Jones was the most prolific and
influential golf course architect of the twentieth century and became
the archetypical modern golf course designer. Jones spread the gospel of
golf by designing courses in forty-two US states and twenty-eight
countries. Twenty U.S. Opens, America's national championship, have been
contested on Jones-designed courses.
"New York Times "bestselling
biographer James R. Hansen, author of "First Man: The Life of Neil A.
Armstrong," recounts how an English immigrant boy arrived in upstate New
York in 1912, just as golf was emerging as a popular pastime in
America. Jones excelled as a golfer, earning admission to Cornell
University, whose faculty consented to a curriculum tailored to teach
him the knowledge needed to design golf courses. Cornell provided the
springboard for an act of self-invention that propelled Jones from
obscurity to worldwide fame.
Jones believed that every hole should
be "a difficult par but an easy bogey." As gifted as he was at golf
design, Jones was equally skilled as a salesman, promoter, and
entrepreneur. "Golf Digest"'s annual rankings of the 100 Greatest Golf
Courses have regularly featured about fifty Jones designs, paving the
path for his two sons, Robert Jr., and Rees, whose work would carry on
their father's tradition. Hansen examines Jones's legacy in all its
complexity and influence, including the fraternal rivalry of Jones's
distinguished sons.
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