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Herbert Warren Wind Series
SKU: Series
The Story of American Golf (1954, 1956, 1975)
Its Champions and Its Championships, by Herb Wind -
Wind's masterpiece and one of the great books in the literature of golf; an invaluable resource for the modern golf historian. Afterword by Robert. S. Macdonald.
An Introduction to the Literature of Golf (1996)
by Herbert Warren Wind -
Thirty-seven essays describing and introducing the masterpieces of golf literature as published in the inaugural Classics of Golf series of books 1983-1995.
Herbert Warren Wind's Golf Book (1948)
By Herbert Warren Wind Forward by Bing Crosby -
A stirring collection of magazine articles and excerpts assembled only the way Herbert Warren Wind can. Wind offers his thoughts on Hogan, Snead, Venturi and Darwin, among others. Wind's finest essays were written for The New Yorker Magazine, which gave him all the space he needed. They inspired thousands of golfers and set the standards for the golf writers that followed. This collection contains some of his most famous pieces on the great players, tournaments, golf architecture, turning points in the history of the game, and unusual aspects of golf that no one else bothered to write about.
The Complete Golfer (1954)
edited by Herbert Warren Wind-
Sampling the best in golf literature, these selections by one of the great writers on the game cover every aspect of golf through history, biography, architecture, and short stories.
On the Tour with Harry Sprague (1960)
by Herbert Warren Wind
Wind's sense of humor and flair for fiction is on display, creating Harry, the hapless professional, a most irritating, yet endearing character. Foreword by Gitty Wind Scheft, Wind's sister.
The Greatest Game of All (1969)
My Life In Golf
by Jack Nicklaus, with Herb Wind
Written when Nicklaus, at age 28, was already the greatest golfer in the world, it provides insight into his upbringing and how he pursued his golfing goals.
Thirty Years of Championship Golf (1950)
The Life and Times of Gene Sarazen
by Gene Sarazen, with Herbert Warren Wind
This candid autobiography of the legendary golfer gives a fine account of golf during the 1920s and 30s. Afterword by Peter Ryde.
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