Book Description
Tom Callahan has written the seminal book on golfing great Tiger Woods. Woods, who has gone out of his way to protect his privacy, has never allowed himself to get close enough to a writer to be properly examined on the page. And, as a consequence, his fans know relatively little about him except what’s divulged in quick tournament interviews or the scarce information parsed out on occasion by one of his handlers. Which is to say, we know next to nothing about one of the most famous people in the world. Callahan, commonly regarded as one of the best all-round sports writers in the country, has followed Tiger around the world of golf for more than seven years, enjoying a certain access to the man and his family. He even went so far as to travel to Vietnam to learn the fate of the South Vietnamese soldier who was Earl Wood’s best friend during the war—and his son’s namesake.
Tiger is twenty years old when the book opens and twenty-seven when it closes. During those years, Callahan covered Woods at all the Majors, including the Masters, the U.S. Open, and the British Open, culminating in Tiger’s heart-stopping race to make history by clinching the string of Majors affectionately nicknamed the Tiger Slam. As the pulse of golf was measured by the curve of his swing, Tiger made everyone’s heart skip a beat as he attempted to win the Grand Slam a year later.
Along the way, Tom Callahan hears from everyone who is anyone in the world of Tiger Woods, including Phil Mickelson, Jack Nicklaus, David Duval, Butch Harmon, Ernie Els, and, of course, Tiger’s rather ubiquitous mother and father. As much as we learn about Tiger—how he sees himself in relation to the courses he plays on and the players he has learned from and competed with—we also enjoy a bird’s-eye view of golf as it is now with Tiger on the scene, and as it was for
centuries before.
In Search of Tiger catalogs and dissects moments and influences in Tiger’s guarded life and unprecedented career—moments that unveil him, his awesome drive, and his enormous talent. Tom Callahan has written a classic of its kind, a book to rank with the best in its genre. He has done what few have even attempted—
he has found the real Tiger Woods.
From the Hardcover edition.
Customer Reviews:
Gay's Tiger review.......2007-01-19
I had been looking for this book since last June, as a gift for my son. He finally received it before Christmas and seems to be enjoying it very much. I was in his home when he received it and that was a pleasure for me. The book was in good shape, looked like new although I was told it wasn't. Appreciate your help in solving my problem...
Not quite what I hoped, but..........2006-02-19
Callahan's book can, at first, be considered a misnomer. The search for Tiger Woods is not conducted in this book-rather, we find that Callahan attempts to search for a sense of humanity within one of the most underrated, and often misunderstood sports: golf. Callahan takes us on a "tour" (forgive the unavoidable pun), through the often overlooked sport, though the eyes and stories of some of golf's most visible and legendary players. From comparing stories of Jack Nicklaus's and Phil Mickelson's introductions into golf, Callahan attempts to provide the reader with the sense that golf, much like football and basketball, has a vivid cast of characters. Callahan goes on to prove this, by exposing the reader to many great stories about those said characters.
What ties all of this to Tiger Woods, is that Woods appears in this book as the looming figure, casting a shadow over golf (in a good way), and all of these golfers can only accept the fact that they all, currently, are underneath this shadow, and don't seem to have figured out a way to get out from under it. In essence, golf is Tiger's world: all of these great players are just living in it.
For anybody who wishes to gain a better understanding of some of the noticeable figures in modern golf, this book's nothing short of an asset. For me, at the very least, Callahan provided a great collection of stories that gave a sense of humanity and depth to a sport that is far too often mistaken as a mere hobby.
In Search of Tiger : A Journey Through Golf With Tiger Woods.......2005-01-16
In Search of Tiger: A Journey Through Golf with Tiger Woods, written by Tom Callahan, was a good book. I enjoyed reading this book because it compared other golfers to Tiger Woods. The only problem with this book is that it talked about many other professional golfers such as Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicklaus but very little about Tiger Woods. This book is not quite a biography but the author does talk about some of the tournaments Tiger Woods' participated in. In the book, I was able to see the comparison between Tiger and his father and other golfers and their fathers. The book was still very interesting. It was a detailed book and described Callahan's meetings with the professional golfers. I could see the influence Tiger Woods has already made in the PGA and his capabilities in the golf game. This book is not what I expected so if you are looking for a biography, do not read this book.
Not quite.......2004-04-26
This book is a compelling read for someone with a starting knowledge of and interest in Tiger Woods, but it doesn't quite make you feel like you've found Tiger. The book seems to be too choppy, more a series of isolated chapters thrown in that dont seem to connect. And there are too many questions that you are left with after reading it. If you're going to brag that you covered Tiger at all his first 8 majors, why have chapters only on the 3 in 2000? And if you're going to focus on those, why soak them with background info and then glaze over the tremendous performances? Callahan's description of Tiger during the 2000 PGA is particularly weak; why he decides to condense that great final round with May and the great back nine and the putts on 18 and 16 the second time around into about a page and a half befuddled me. And most of all, why devote so much of the book to learning about golfers other than Tiger? It's true that if you were to write the definitive, thoroughly detailed Tiger book, you could not ignore Lefty, Sergio, Ernie, etc. But when the chapters on the other golfers seem to take up half of this relatively short book, you've gone too far. It's true that this book is well written and will provide you with some nice tidbits about Tiger (such as the fact that his mother was the one to get him to wear red on Sundays), but you will likely leave the book hoping for more detail, more coherence, and more depth.
Tom Callahan Pens the Definitive Tiger Bio.......2004-02-14
There is simply no sportswriter on earth with as much meticulous insight into the minds of both the golfing legends of old and the stars of today as Tom Callahan. Admittedly, my expectations were lofty going in here, esp. after reading the astounding accolades bestowed upon Callahan on the book jacket alone -- from the likes of Costas, Kornheiser, Jenkins, Reilly, Nicklaus, and others. Thankfully, for once, they were all right. This book is indeed the whole package on Tiger, presented (ingeniously) not only via Tiger's own eyes, but those of his peers and predecessors. The golf history in the book is cleverly detailed yet pleasurably digestible. The first hand interviews with Tiger and his family are unprecedented. And the "Journey", for anyone REALLY interested in Tiger, is remarkably satisfying. Kudos to Tom Callahan for giving the sports world the preeminent Tiger bio.
Book Description
Big Billy the Panda Bear lives happily at a carousel called the Gnoo Zoo in the land of Gnoo. There, he and his friends -- Eistein, an intelligent elephant; Miss Marbles, a vain ostrich; and Chattaboonga and Boongachatta, the tomboy chimps -- bring great joy to the children who visit each day. But one horrible night the evil dragon Reptillion takes over, robbing the gentle creatures of their music, lights, and joy - apparently forever!
Customer Reviews:
This is not a Christian Book.......2007-10-08
This series would be great for any "religious person", but if you want to read to your children to pass on Christian truths, this book is not a good choice.
Shelia Walsh has a great goal - to use a fictional story to portray the love that God has for each one of us. One is reminded of Pilgrim's Progress and The Chronicles of Narnia. She even mentions Pilgrim's Progress in the forward. Sadly, she fails in accomplishing her goals. She fails because she fudges on Biblical themes.
First, God is portrayed as "The Great White Tiger", which sounds like a number of non-Christian religions I can think of. If you are into Eastern or Native American religions I think you will be quite comfortable reading this book! But I thought the language she adopted confuses kids on the nature of God.
Secondly, in this series, "The Great White Tiger" does not sacrifice anything for love. The Christian faith centers around the work of the Son of God who gave Himself as a substitute for sinful people. The Bible answers the question, "How do we know God loves us?" with the statement "[God] loved us and sent his Son to be an atoning sacrifice for our sins." By the way, the series denies the existence of sin (calling it a bad influence) and misses the true problem of our children's hearts.
The love in the book rings hollow when the characters get themselves into trouble, yell out a prayer, and "The Great White Tiger" answers by sending one of his minions to help. No sacrifice on his part. It is the hollow love of a millionaire giving a dollar to a beggar.
The Biblical theme that is missing is the sacrifice that God made in sending His own Son to die. Any book that leaves out redemptive and sacrificial themes cannot truly be called a Christian book, the kind of sacrifice we see in good fiction like "The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe".
The books are not especially good either. The characters names were complicated and the story uninspiring. I became tired of hearing how "cool" the characters were.
But the worst part about this series was that it masquerades as a Christian series when it is not. It gives a poor picture of God, a hollow view of love, and a distorted view of human nature.
You may say, it is just a kids book, but I say that I want my kids to be connected with important truths. I believe the truth will set them free. Walsh tried to make God's love understandable, and instead makes love a petty thing by removing the concept of sacrifice.
I have never written a negative review of a children's book before and am saddened that I have to. I like most of the books I read to my kids, even the majority of the non-Christian ones, but these ones were so bad I felt I had to write.
Please, authors, write good Christian books, write good secular books, but don't try to mishmash them together, it makes bad and confusing reading!
Great White Tiger series .......2005-11-29
I used the series on Wednesday nights at church last year. The kids (K-2nd grade) loved them. A couple of weeks ago, a third grader asked what was happening with the Great White Tiger. During the year, I'd see kids out at various places and they would beg me to tell them what was going to happen next. Those incidences speak for themselves. I wish Ms. Walsh would write another book to go along with this wonderful series.
The Great White Tiger.......2005-03-28
This book is wonderful. I bought it for my 4 year-old and 7 year-old nieces. They loved it. After I read it to them, I bought another copy and took it to church so that I could read it to my Sunday school class. The children were so enthralled, sitting quietly so that they could hear the story and see the pictures! My nieces and my sunday school students recognized that the Great White Tiger was God immediately.
An entertaining animated, "child friendly" adventure.......2002-01-04
Part of the outstanding Tommy Nelson "Gnoo Zoo" series, and based on the popular book by Sheila Walsh, In Search Of The Great White Tiger: A Story About Following God is a wonderfully produced and presented 42-minute video showcasing the story of Big Billy the panda, his animal friends, and the night an evil dragon attempted to take over Gnoo Zoo to rob the gentle creatures of their music, lights, and joy. To save the zoo our heroes go in search of the Great White Tiger in an imaginative, exciting, totally entertaining animated, "child friendly" adventure. In Search Of The Great White Tiger is very highly recommended, especially for young viewers ages 5 through 8.
Average customer rating:
|
Busca los animales de la selva/ In Search of the Wild Animals
Pere Rovira
Manufacturer: Susaeta
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Counting
| Basic Concepts
| Baby-3
| Children's Books
| Subjects
| Books
School & Education
| Reference & Nonfiction
| Children's Books
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Activity Books
| Sports & Activities
| Children's Books
| Subjects
| Books
Nonfiction
| General
| Animals
| Children's Books
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Infantil y juvenil
| Libros en español
| Formats
| Books
No ficción
| Infantil y juvenil
| Libros en español
| Formats
| Books
4 a 8 años
| Infantil y juvenil
| Libros en español
| Formats
| Books
| General
| Libros con Dibujos
No-Ficción
| General
| Animales
| Infantil y juvenil
| Libros en español
| Formats
| Books
Suma y Resta
| Conceptos Básicos
| Bebes a 3 años
| Infantil y juvenil
| Libros en español
| Formats
| Books
Escuela y Educación
| Referencia y No-Ficción
| Infantil y juvenil
| Libros en español
| Formats
| Books
General
| Libros de Actividades
| Deportes y Actividades
| Infantil y juvenil
| Libros en español
| Formats
| Books
ASIN: 8430531718 |
Book Description
A rich-and richly opinionated-collection of sports writing by Esquire's Writer At Large and weekly commentator on NPR's Only A Game. Here, at last, is Charles Pierce's best writing on sports, collected for the first time in one volume. All of these pieces, first published in GQ, The National, and Esquire, showcase Pierce's trademark humor. Some are spot-on profiles of famous sports personalities such as Tiger Woods, Magic Johnson, and Peyton Manning, while others are portraits of lesser-known figures such as Nebraska basketball coach Danny Nee, a former Vietnam vet who openly opposed the Gulf War, Cool Papa Bell, a ballplayer from the Negro Leagues who is ripped off by memorabilia hounds, and Mike Donald, an obscure golfer on the PGA tour who plays the best golf in his life only to lose a tournament by one stroke. Pierce also takes us on unforgettable journeys into the wide world of sports, from a snake-charming pole-vaulter to life on the Hooters Golf Tour, from the fashion accessories of the modern ballplayer to how a small community -Warroad, Minnesota-bonds over ice hockey. Sports Guy will delight Pierce's devoted readers and is certain to win him many, many more.
Customer Reviews:
A Great Read.......2001-05-30
I am a fan of the game behind the game when it comes to sports. I do like to watch the games, but what I find really interesting is stories of the individuals and the stories about what happens off the field. That is why I have thoroughly enjoyed Mr. Pierce's book.
I believe the reason sports fascinates us so much is not do to the game but the people who play the game, and how the "game" effects the rest of the world. Mr. Pierce provides that much-needed insight into sorts. He pushes beyond the box scores to bring reader to the heart of sports.
In this collection there is a wide range of topics and sports covered, each with Pierce's attention to detail and sharp wit. He goes from the back roads to the inner offices to find the stories behind the sports. He handles each subject with care, and though he may not handle each person or more appropriately ego with care it is done only to breathe reality into the Hollywood and marketing of sports.
Pierce has a writing style that is refreshing and each piece has its own flavor. Sitting down with his book is almost like sitting down with a collection of different authors. While Piece does have his own style he does not let that interfere with writing the story they way it needs to be written. He does not try to shoe horn events or people into his style instead he lets his subjects pick the tone and the pace, and he adds the frame and the lighting for us to better understand them.
But please do not take my comments about Pierce style to mean that his work is heady or inaccessible. In fact its quite the opposite, after all this is a man who likes to sit in the bleachers with a paper cup of beer in his hand and cheer loudly for the home team. Instead I offered my comments to point out that this book is not just for sports fan, but also for people who enjoy stories.
Pierce is THE sports guy........2001-03-22
I am a fan of the game behind the game when it comes to sports. I do like to watch the games, but what I find really interesting is stories of the individuals and the stories about what happens off the field. That is why I have thoroughly enjoyed Mr. Pierce's book.
I believe the reason sports fascinates us so much is not do to the game but the people who play the game, and how the "game" effects the rest of the world. Mr. Pierce provides that much-needed insight into sorts. He pushes beyond the box scores to bring reader to the heart of sports.
In this collection there is a wide range of topics and sports covered, each with Pierce's attention to detail and sharp wit. He goes from the back roads to the inner offices to find the stories behind the sports. He handles each subject with care, and though he may not handle each person or more appropriately ego with care it is done only to breathe reality into the Hollywood and marketing of sports.
Pierce has a writing style that is refreshing and each piece has its own flavor. Sitting down with his book is almost like sitting down with a collection of different authors. While Piece does have his own style he does let that interfere with writing the story they way it needs to be written. He does try to shoe horn events or people into his style instead he lets his subjects pick the tone and the pace, and he adds the frame and the lighting for us to better understand them.
But please do not take my comments about Pierce style to mean that his work is heady or inaccessible. In fact its quite the opposite, after all this is a man who likes to sit in the bleachers with a paper cup of beer in his hand and cheer loudly for the home team. Instead I offered my comments to point out that this book is not just for sports fan, but also for people who enjoy stories.
Boring Book.......2001-03-19
After hearing Pierce on NPR over the years, I looked forward to reading this book expecting to be entertained--at least a little. But, I was most disappointed by both the writing and the content. The book lacks the wit and the depth of insight one might expect from the title. I also found Pierce and Blount to be overly critical and harsh in many spots--almost irrationally angry and ornery--it left me scratching my head and saying to myself, what's their problem? So, this book is not recommended for the avid sports reader--maybe it's because these guys have no or very little experience with playing sports themselves--a common probelm with so many obnoxious sports critics! Overall summary: A waste of money I could have spent attending a good sports event!
A great book, and not just for sports guys.......2001-01-31
Charlie Pierce has been writing about sports for about a quarter-century, and Sports Guy anthologizes some of his work of the past 10 years. Lots of sportswriters would like you to think they are essayists and that they are writing not about athletics, but about life and its profundities. However, boxing and food and travel and history and war correspondent A.J. Liebling is dead, so Pierce has the center ring to himself.
There are 30 pieces here. Take one a day, save some for your flight delay, or read them all at once. Here are some favorites:
"Soul on Ice," where Pierce's sentences swoop like chittering bats in the soft night to scoop up another tasty adjective, only to halt in mid-air for the kill: "Community is virtually lost to sports today. A team does not rise within a city. It is laid upon it ..." Plus the history of the Ojibwe.
"The Snake-Handling Pole Vaulter," which is every bit as funny and quirky and charming as the title, until the end.
The racism in the distinction between "smart" ball player and the one with "natural ability," and how Larry Bird and Magic Johnson messed with this.
And how Magic Johnson sentenced Earvin Johnson to exile and possibly to early death.
"The Man. Amen" is notorious, and important, and not funny. It is the Tiger Woods piece, where Pierce ripped the façade of sainthood off the golfer. This chapter should carry a graphic-language disclaimer. And for that very reason, every journalism student should read it.
Other celebrity interviews include Allen Iverson, Shaquille O'Neal, and Deion Sanders. Even better are the talks with the unknowns: Bob Marley's son the linebacker. Wolfman the lottery-winning traveling wrestler. The golf pros who teeter on the edge of fame and fall back to the other side. The corkball players.
There are not a lot of women here. But "Two Tough Mothers" features two women who are not softball pitchers or soccer goalies, but who play hardball. And get in trouble for it.
As alluded to, Pierce quotes both the foul-mouthed and the well-mannered athlete accurately. But if teachers and parents are comfortable that, this is a fine book to give to the student whose intellectual high point of the day has been ESPN's Sportscenter. And give it to those who know who Dickie Beardsley is, and what happened to him, and to those who don't.
Book Description
While trying every sport under the sun, playing with only the best, and pushing himself to the limit, never once did acclaimed sports journalist Ian Stafford think that the sport of golf was suited for him. It just wasn't his kind of game-or so he thought. But that was only in the beginning, before he picked up his first club or met Nick Faldo, Ernie Els, Jack Nicklaus, and Bernhard Langer and traveled to Greenland, Prague, New Orleans, and Tokyo. This was still way before he'd begun to think that he might actually be good at this golf business and long before he'd toyed with the crazy notion of coming face to face with the Tiger.
Follow Ian Stafford through his journey into the wonderful world of golf, a sport that has become a global epidemic, as he comes to an understanding of the attraction to the course that no true golfer can ignore. With humor and excitement, he embarks on this thoroughly enjoyable quest to find the golfer within us all. For those dedicated and fully consumed by golf or for those who have yet to feel the allure of the green . . . this book is for you.
Customer Reviews:
A Witty Adventure Through the World of Golf.......2004-07-06
Sports writer Ian Stafford sat in a taxi on the way to Heathrow listening to the cab driver relate his near death experience on a golf course. Lightning had struck the ground near him, shocking him through the grip of his golf club and knocking him to the ground. Yet so obsessed with the game, the cabbie was angry with the Gods for ruining his following shots and forcing a triple-bogey. At that point, Stafford decides he must learn to play gold and understand this world-wide obsession.
What follows is an around-the-world golf tour on a quest to learn the game and eventually play alongside Tiger Woods. From Australia, to Japan, Scotland, Denmark, the frozen wastelands of Greenland (I'm not kidding) Ian meets other famous golfers: Jack Nicklaus, Nick Faldo, Isao Aoki, Ernie Els, Bernhard Langer, and many more. Eventually Tiger Woods enters the picture.
Along with the wit and the laughs are keen observations about the game and the players who flock to the greens. He looks for the golfer in all of us.
Memorable laughs--the temporary rules issued by the English Richmond Golf Club in 1940 during the London Blitz:
1. Players are asked to collect Bomb and Shrapnel splinters to save these causing damage to the Mowing Machines.
2. In Competitions, during gunfire or while bombs are falling, players may take cover without penalty for ceasing play.
3. The position of known delayed action bombs are marked by red flags at a reasonable, but not guaranteed, safe distance there-from.
4. Shrapnel and/or bomb splinters on the Fairways or in Bunkers within a club's length of the ball may be moved without penalty, and no penalty shall be incurred if a ball is caused to be moved accidentally.
(etc.)
And on the "green" in Greenland: "By anyone's standards it was a difficult shot. The ball was still some distance from the flag, the group of golfers behind were growing impatient with my slow play and the round, which had started reasonable well, was beginning to disintegrate. The main problem, though, was the iceberg."
From the Times of London: "Stafford's indomitability, his chutzpah, his lunatic hubris, inspires a kind of incredulous sympathy."
Average customer rating:
|
In Search Of The Great White Tiger Gnooterrific
Integrity Music
Manufacturer: Thomas Nelson
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Audio Cassette
Music
| Books on Cassette
| Audiobooks
| Formats
| Books
General
| Books on Cassette
| Audiobooks
| Formats
| Books
General
| Music
| Entertainment
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: 747202239X |
Book Description
Your children will meet wild, wacky characters and learn long-lasting biblical truths, attitudes, and concepts through fun songs and tongue-twisted lyrics.
Created by singer and author Sheila Walsh, this album provides opportunities for your child to forge a stronger relationship with God.
In the land of Gnoo, your children will meet Big Billy, the panda bear who lives happily at a carousel called the Gnoo Zoo with his friends Einstein, an intelligent elephant; Miss Marbles, a vain ostrich; and Chattaboonga and Boongachatt, the tomboy chimps.
As the evil dragon Reptillion takes over to rob the gentle creations of their music, lights, and joy, Big Billy and his friends set out on the journey of their lives in search of the Great White Tiger, who alone can restore joy and peace to their world.
Song selections include:
1. Gnoo Theme Song
2. Welcome To Gnoo
3. Reptillion
4. G-N-O-O-Oh, My Goodness
5. Do You Do Gnoo?
6. If I Were The Big Cheese
7. Gnoo Cool
8. Chocolate Shake
9. Dream On
10. The Gnoo Finale
Book Description
The author examines the process of social life and the relationship of myth, popular formula, and the mystery genre to social psychology. The book presents social construction of reality theory as a methodology upon which the structure of mass-mediated popular fiction can be examined, postulating definitions of myth and formula and advancing a new language of literary analysis that acknowledges the socially defining, democratizing experience of popular fiction. Social-psychological analysis is focused on the mystery genre and examines its taxonomy, including the supernatural, fiction noir, gangster, thief, thriller, and detective formulas.
Average customer rating:
|
In Search of the Tiger
Ian Stafford
Manufacturer: Ebury Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General
| Golf
| Sports
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Sports
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: 0091886562 |
Average customer rating:
|
In Search of Tiger
Tom Callahan
Manufacturer: Brilliance Audio on MP3-CD
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: MP3 CD
General
| Biographies & Memoirs
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Biographies
| Sports
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Golf
| Sports
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Sports
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Business & Investing
| Subjects
| Books
Biographies & Memoirs
| Books on CD
| Audiobooks
| Formats
| Books
Biographies & Memoirs
| MP3 CD
| Audiobooks
| Formats
| Books
Business & Investing
| MP3 CD
| Audiobooks
| Formats
| Books
Sports
| MP3 CD
| Audiobooks
| Formats
| Books
Accessories:
-
Brilliance Audio DMP-206b Soul MP3-CD Audiobook Player
ASIN: 1593350945
Release Date: 2004-06-10 |
Book Description
Tom Callahan has written the seminal book on golfing great Tiger Woods. Woods, who has gone out of his way to protect his privacy, has never allowed himself to get close enough to a writer to be properly examined on the page. Callahan, commonly regarded as one of the best all-round sports writers in the country, has followed Tiger around the world of golf for more than seven years, enjoying a certain access to the man and his family. He even went so far as to travel to Vietnam to learn the fate of the South Vietnamese soldier who was Earl Wood's best friend during the war - and his son's namesake.
Tiger is twenty years old when the book opens and twenty-seven when it closes. During those years, Callahan covered Woods at all the Majors, including the Masters, the U.S. Open, and the British Open, culminating in Tiger's heart-stopping race to make history by clinching the string of Majors affectionately nicknamed the Tiger Slam.
Along the way, Tom Callahan hears from everyone who is anyone in the world of Tiger Woods, including Phil Mickelson, Jack Nicklaus, David Duval, Butch Harmon, Ernie Els, and, of course, Tiger's rather ubiquitous mother and father. As much as we learn about Tiger - how he sees himself in relation to the courses he plays on and the players he has learned from and competed with - we also enjoy a bird's-eye view of golf as it is now with Tiger on the scene, and as it was for centuries before.
Books:
- Insecure at Last: Losing It in Our Security-Obsessed World
- International Business with Online Learning Center access card
- International Business with Online Learning Center access card
- International Marketing (Mcgraw Hill/Irwin Series in Marketing)
- It's Your Ship: Management Techniques from the Best Damn Ship in the Navy
- Joe DiMaggio : The Hero's Life
- Joe Louis vs. Rocky Marciano
- Journey to the High Southwest, 7th: A Traveler's Guide to Santa Fe and the Four Corners of Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah
- Luckiest Man: The Life and Death of Lou Gehrig
- Major League Baseball Players of 1916: A Biographical Dictionary
Books Index
Books Home
Recommended Books
- Singapore Changes Guard: Social, Political and Economic Directions in the 1990s
- History: Fiction or Science
- 2000 Edition Retail Resource Guide
- Bush at War
- Heyday: A Novel
- History: Fiction or Science
- Central Rockies Mammals
- Tourism Market Trends 2002: Africa
- Accounts Payable: A Guide to Running an Efficient Department
- Flesh Unlimited