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Golf and the Spirit: Lessons for the Journey

Golf and the Spirit: Lessons for the Journey

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Author: M. Scott Peck
Creator: Christopher Peck
Publisher: Three Rivers Press (CA)
Category: Book

List Price: £10.90
Buy Used: £0.01
You Save: £10.89 (100%)



Used (17) from £0.01

Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars 3 reviews
Sales Rank: 657982

Media: Paperback
Edition: Reprint
Pages: 352
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1
Dimensions (in): 8.8 x 5.9 x 0.9

ISBN: 0609805665
Dewey Decimal Number: 796.352019
EAN: 9780609805664
ASIN: 0609805665

Publication Date: May 2000
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Golf and the Spirit: Golf Lessons for the Journey
  • Hardcover - Golf and the Spirit: Lessons for the Journey (Wheeler Hardcover)

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.co.uk Review
Having toured The Road Less Traveled in previous bestsellers, psychiatrist and self-help guru Peck finally sets out on the cartpath. His destination? A journey into the mysteries of the royal and ancient game. Given the tenor of his earlier work, it's surprising he took so long to take aim at this particularly pilgrim-filled target area.

Peck, a golfer since his army days in the '60s, fairly and fittingly uses the game as a metaphor for spiritual growth. Dividing his book into 18 holes with titles like "Civility", "Human Nature", "The Invisible", "Deftness" (and, for good measure, a 19th called "Closure"), he navigates his course prudently and self- referentially with a bag full of mysticism, religion and psychology, and acquits himself with a safe par performance. Nothing particularly dangerous or spectacular emerges from his thinking about the game. Instead, he puts a New Age spin on it-- "Golf is probably the most nonlinear pastime on the face of the earth"; "A day of golf may seem like a personal holiday ... but it is hardly a holy day"; "I do believe that golf can be a wonderful spiritual path of growth toward God, but only if one chooses to use it as such"--on the roads already well travelled by such masterful analysts of golf's raptures and ridicules as Harvey Penick, Michael Murphy, Jim Flick, Tommy Armour, Bobby Jones, and Bob Rotella. Peck, of course, is right about golf being a spiritual journey; it's an inner game of personal demons that demands its players to get as much of a grip on themselves as on their clubs. The bogey on his scorecard is that those who play golf already know this. -- Jeff Silverman


Customer Reviews:

2 out of 5 stars Mr Pecks paradox - Golf/Life, Readable/Unreadable   March 13, 2001
keith.a.brown@bt.com (Guildford, England)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Golf and the Spirit, while starting off as an interesting and thought provoking read ends up being just a bit to longwinded (I didn't manage get past the Fifteenth hole before heading to the club house!!). Also although I know the book is amied at both golfers and non-golfers, I did feel that it ended up dumbing down the game for anyone but the complete novice.


4 out of 5 stars a book about life and the sport of golf   July 21, 1999
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

i find it to be very thought provoking. it makes me think about how things in my life are reflecting in the game of golf and golf and life. it even provides some rules of golf that i was not aware of. it is soothing to the spirit. i like it a lot.


2 out of 5 stars Nice shot, but in the rough: `the fairway less traveled?'   June 30, 1999
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

A fascinating idea (not the only time someone's tried it, though) which ends up being somewhat pretentious and forced. In terms of the running metaphor which Peck uses throughout, he's played a nice shot, struck the ball quite cleanly, but either his feet or his hands weren't in exactly the right position, and the ball ends up in quite a tricky bit of rough, from where he'll have difficulty with the iron to the green. Cashing this out, he does explain a lot for the non-golfer (some of it a bit ponderous for the golfer, who is the much more likely reader), but the lessons he draws from the game to the rest of life often feel somewhat forced. Granted that golf is indeed one of the best games for bringing out, or for inculcating, human character, I think Peck's material here was worth perhaps a 90-page paperback, not this rather long treatment. The best thing about the book was the invisible subtitle which I guessed at: The Fairway Less Traveled.

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