Everyone should read the A NOTE ON THE WRITING on page 479. Frost freely admits to using "a dramatist's license" in an attempt to get at the spirit of the proceedings. That tells you right there that it is a historical novel. Enough cynical condemnation. Geez. Can't we just enjoy golf on this website for once?!!!!!
By the way, all of written history ("factual" or otherwise) is biased and slanted and we must take it with a grain of salt.
Now enjoy the game!!! Please. For your own sakes, enjoy the game.
Dear Eddie (not THE Eddie, are you? I thought you'd be dead by now!) --
Good point, well taken, about the note on Page 479.
Here's my good addendum to your good point: That note should have been on Page IX, not on Page 479. People tend to read books from beginning to end, and it seems to me that if you're going to be fabricating material for a TRUE story, you owe it to your audience to let them know that ahead of time. Even in Hollywood, which has cornered the market on cynicism, the "BASED ON A TRUE STORY" line precedes the movie.
As for your point that "all of written history ('factual' or otherwise) is biased and slanted and we must take it with a grain of salt": Bunk!
Henry Ford reportedly said (I wasn't there) that "History is bunk" -- possibly a demonstration (reminiscent of the one we saw recently here, involving the wretched prose of Frank Lloyd Wright) of our good fortune that Ford went into the car-building business rather than into Academe.
Because history isn't bunk -- or at least it needn't be!
Things do happen. Good historians faithfully document them.
People do say things. Good historians accurately quote them.
Did Lincoln go to Gettysburg and give a little speech beginning "Fourscore and seven years ago..."? He did. Historians didn't invent his visit; they didn't fabricate his speech. And no "dramatist's license" would excuse the rewriting of that speech!
Now, as to exactly what Lincoln's motivations might have been: That's the sort of question where historians, unfortunately being human beings, are, as you put it, "biased" and "slanted," and their interpretations should be taken with a grain of salt.
But that, of course, is NOT the sort of question that these are: Did Vardon lose 1 match out of 88 -- or 13 out of 88? Did Francis Ouimet find a Vardon Flyer in the long grass at Brookline when he was a boy?
Mr. Frost may be able to justify (citing his self-issued dramatist's license) guessing what Eddie and Francis said to each other when there was no one within earshot to document it (it's pretty obviously all hokum, anyway) -- but, in my view, and you're of course free not to share it, he has no possible justification for misreporting the actual, known facts of the story.
When the facts are known, a "dramatist's license" is bunk!