No Tie Required: How the Rich Stole Golf

No Tie Required: How the Rich Stole Golf

by Christopher Cairns (Author)

Synopsis

No Tie Required is an entertaining journey across Britain, celebrating the wonderful, eccentric and historical public courses where no club membership is required. Not for Chris Cairns the member's door and the pink gins of the 19th hole. Instead the author has sought out the country's pay-and-play courses in order to experience how non-members get their golfing fix. Public course in Britain come in just about every shape and size. From picturesque honest box courses in the Highlands, to converted potato fields in Essex and over-crowded city-parks in London. At all these courses there are regulars who play in all weathers and who are happy to tell their stories. Behind the author's journey -- apart from the joy of playing and sharing a pint or two with the locals -- is the desire to trace the history of why the game's origins have been so badly relegated in status. Today a handful of highly exclusive private members clubs seem to dominate the image of golf. Is this justified? Or is the them and us approach a fiction in today's Britain.

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Quantity

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 288
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Headline
Published: 06 Jun 2005

ISBN 10: 075531378X
ISBN 13: 9780755313785

Media Reviews
'I enjoyed and was informed by this easy, entertaining book, and it leaves me itching to get out there again and play this maddening, addictive, alluring game' -- The Scotsman 'I'll say one thing for Cairns, he is clearly a man after my own heart. This delightful book proves that he is clearly besotted with one of life's supreme pleasures...the game of golf... I greatly enjoyed 'No Tie Required', Cairns has a nice eye for social and civic detail.' -- Graham Spiers, Scottish Review of Books
Author Bio
Chris Cairns is a freelance writer and journalist based in Edinburgh. He has also had numerous environmental pieces published in The Sunday Times, the Sunday Herald and trade magazines. Prior to going freelance, he was a news reporter and then environmental correspondent at The Scotsman. He began his journalistic career in English local and regional newspapers.