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Out of the Bunker and Into the Trees, or the Secret of High-Tension Golf - by Rex Lardner (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- One of Sports Illustrated's Top 100 Sports Books of All Time For less expense than a lost bet on the links, you can learn how to get "out of the bunker and into the trees.
- About the Author: Rex Lardner (1918-98) is the author of fifteen books, including The Lardner Report, Downhill Lies and Other Falsehoods, and Ali.
- 192 Pages
- Humor, Topic
Description
About the Book
Originally published: Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1960.Book Synopsis
One of Sports Illustrated's Top 100 Sports Books of All Time
For less expense than a lost bet on the links, you can learn how to get "out of the bunker and into the trees." Rex Lardner, a unique stylist who hit his best shots when in a towering rage, reveals the secrets every golfer needs to know, including how to loft a ball out of your own trouser cuff; how to properly grip the 2-wood when smashing it against a tree; and how to hit special "trick" shots--the fade, the slice, the yip--without a club if necessary.
Out of the Bunker and into the Trees is essential reading for those looking to correct typical golfing faults. If you are an inconsistent putter, Lardner demonstrates how you never need to take more than six putts to hole out on any green. Too much reliance on advice from strangers? Lardner presents an object lesson with his traumatic experiences teaching pros.
Originally published in 1960, Out of the Bunker and into the Trees is so funny that various chapters have been widely reprinted in sports magazines. Readers today continue to enjoy this delightful parody of golf and golfers by a humorist who claimed to have discovered the reason people play golf: "to destroy themselves."
Review Quotes
"For those of us who've never once considered even taking up golf, this little masterwork answers all the questions we've failed to ask. Once the reader truly learns how to establish the all-important Tension in his--or, more recently, her--game, golf assumes its natural role as God's punishment for business executives. There are rumors Mr. Lardner never actually played the game. I've never built a nuclear weapon, yet I can still tell you how to avoid getting blown up by one. But enough about me."--Harry Shearer, actor, comedian, and writer
"Rex [Lardner] was an accomplished tennis player and a two-time Big Ten wrestling champ, but this hilarious send-up of golf culture might have been his greatest achievement."--Sports Illustrated
About the Author
Rex Lardner (1918-98) is the author of fifteen books, including The Lardner Report, Downhill Lies and Other Falsehoods, and Ali. He was also a journalist and the chief writer for Ernie Kovacs on radio and television shows. Burt Owen was a photographer for publications such as Living for Young Homemakers and Sports Illustrated.