The Greatest Course That Never Was
A Novel
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- $4.99
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- $4.99
Publisher Description
When Charley Hunter first discovered the astonishing golfing prodigy Beau Stedman in The Greatest Player Who Never Lived, he broke the biggest story in golf history. But now, just as Charley is settling down into his budding legal career at a prestigious Atlanta law firm, strange notes clipped to obituaries start to arrive. Curious as to their origin, he tracks down the sender–an old caddie from Augusta National named Moonlight McIntrye–and Charley finds himself drawn into another tangled mystery surrounding a hidden golf course.
Driven by his passion for the game and a hunger for the truth, Charley dives into the most riveting, high-stakes mystery yet, another terrific golf story that will entice and delight fans and newcomers alike. Join Charley and Moonlight in their search for The Greatest Course That Never Was.
Customer Reviews
The Greatest Course that Never Was
I have lived in Augusta, since the late seventies and worked at the course ( it’s a rite of passage ) and because of the job I did from January to two weeks after the tournament every year for five years I read anything I can about it, Bobby Jones, Clifford Roberts, and the players going back to the 60’s. I was also able to play the course on employee day complete with a catered lunch from a famous B-B-Q establishment around these parts, for those 5 years.
I remember most every shot I took on the course and there were a lot of them.
Your first two books mixing facts and fiction brought back many memories that I have of this wonderful place, caddies, and players I’ve met, full time employees I’ve known, and admiration of the countless hours it takes to keep the course in the shape it is in, and seems to stay in.
Thank you for your words, and your storytelling in the style that the world can better appreciate this ‘different sort of place’ that this city revolves around, and I can say is right in my own back yard.
Your use of lore and legend ( fact and fiction ) makes a wonderful bit of reading
I re