News:

Welcome to the Golf Club Atlas Discussion Group!

Please note, each user is approved by the Golf Club Atlas editorial staff. For any new inquiries, please contact us and we will be in contact.


Jay Flemma

American Literature and Golf Course architecture
« on: October 05, 2006, 09:44:44 PM »
This is from my website.  Hope you like it.  There's pics on my website and more on The Last of the Mohicans.

When you live in NYC and ride the subway for half an hour a day, you devour two books a week. I also try to read what good writers have to say about other writers.

Being a colonial history major at Trinity College in CT, on an impulse, I bought James Fenimore Cooper’s The Last of the Mohicans. It’s a fun, if clunky read, as 1826 prose will be.

At the end of the book, lo! and behold! (the punctuation there is correct by the way) there is a critique of Cooper written in 1895 by no less a personage than Samuel Clemens/Mark Twain (or is that Mark Twain/Samuel Clemens, I never can remember.  It’s in a piece he wrote called "Fenimore Cooper’s Literary Offenses." It has great tips about writing, but it could also apply to modern day golf course architecture.

Twain writes:

"Cooper’s gift in the way of invention was not a rich endowment; but such as it was he liked to work it, he was pleased with the effects, and indeed he did some sweet things
with it. In his little box of stage-properties he kept six or eight cunning devices, tricks, artifaces for his Indians and woodsmen to deceive and circumvent each other…and was never so happy as when he was working these….A favorite was to make a moccasined person tread in the tracks of a mocassined enemy and thus hide his own trail. Cooper wore out barrels and barrels of mocassins working that trick."

Author’s note - note the excellent joke: “Cooper wore out barrels and barrels…” A “cooper” is a barrel maker, so Twain has this barrel maker wearing out barrels! Anyway, Twain continues:

"He prized the broken twig above all the rest of his effects, and worked it the hardest. It is a restful chapter in any book of his when somebody doesn’t step on a dry twig and alarm all the enemy Indians or White Men for two hundred yards….Every time a Cooper person is in peril, and absolute silence is worth four dollars a minute [Author’s Note: A thousand dollars given modern currency] he is sure to step on a dry twig. There may be a hundred other handier things to step on, but that wouldn’t satisfy Cooper. Cooper requires him to find a dry twig; and if he can’t do it, go and borrow one. In fact, the Leatherstocking Series ought to have been called the Broken Twig Series."

He ends the review with this scathing, but important observation:

"Cooper’s word sense was singularly dull….When a person has a poor ear for words, the result is [like music sung or played off key] a literary flatting and sharping; you perceive what he is intending to say, but you also perceive that he does not say it. This is Cooper. He was not a word musician. his ear was satisfied with the approximate words."

ON WRITING

Ignoring that Twain belittled a man who was the bedrock foundation of frontier adventure, Twain notes what Ernest Hemingway later also succinctly said about word choice: “The right word is the difference between the lightning bug and the lightning.” To that end, the late, great sportswriter Grantland Rice always carried a pocket Thesaurus wherever he went so that he never used the same adjective in the same piece. The “granite grey” sky at the beginning of one of his gripping stories was a “leaden slate” at the end.

ON GOLF COURSE ARCHITECTURE

Now re-read Twain’s piece and substitute the name of any one of a number of golf course architects for Cooper’s and substitute their typical design features for Cooper’s literary motifs (that’s what the story line tricks are called).

One prominent and excellent architect once told me he only had between 24 and 27 golf holes. Another said he looked at the land, then ran for a book of great holes to see what could be re-created. Charles Blair Macdonald’s masterpiece at National Golf Links of America could technically be called a pastiche (albeit the best ever) as it was an encyclopaedia of the best holes he saw in the UK. The Cape, Redan, Alps, Short, Eden, Long and others lay the template for many of the holes of Dye, Doak, Silva and our other revered great modern architects.

Here’s why I bring it up. Several people have criticized Jim Engh for repeated variations on a theme - for example punchbowls, sidewalls and muscle bunkers. Yes, you could put his name and tricks in there,but you could insert Jones (runway tees, cloverleaf bunkers and forced carries), Nicklaus (high fade shots, aerial attack), Coore and Crenshaw (minimalist features), Doak, Fazio or any architect.

That’s a trap for an architect. They use what works and what what resonates with the person who hires tham next. Yet so long as a) the client is happy; b) the holes are based on solid design principles; and c) the course is interesting, challenging and reveals new secrets every time it’s played, let’s not nit-pick.

Twain was brilliant - one for the ages. Yet here he was hypercritical. Not everybody is trying to be Shakespeare. As time showed, Cooper was certainly not lowest common denominator and although his mastery of words was short of Twain’s, he made up for it by painting history for us. The same is true of golf courses. Their true test is whether they resonate across the decades. There is room for wonderous variety and room for a man to find his niche and pursue it to the highest form it can reach.
« Last Edit: October 05, 2006, 09:48:35 PM by Jay Flemma »

Adam Clayman

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re:American Literature and Golf Course architecture
« Reply #1 on: October 05, 2006, 10:51:48 PM »
Another big world! Who knew?

Jay, Very interesting treaties on all critics.

The GCA similarities are palpable. Especially that part about flow.
"It's unbelievable how much you don't know about the game you've been playing your whole life." - Mickey Mantle

Jay Flemma

Re:American Literature and Golf Course architecture
« Reply #2 on: October 05, 2006, 11:37:52 PM »
Isn't it funny how Twain was so sharp and still resonates to this day?

Adam Clayman

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re:American Literature and Golf Course architecture
« Reply #3 on: October 05, 2006, 11:58:39 PM »
Who is, or will be the next Twain?

He was so simple, yet complex.
"It's unbelievable how much you don't know about the game you've been playing your whole life." - Mickey Mantle

Steve Burrows

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re:American Literature and Golf Course architecture
« Reply #4 on: October 06, 2006, 01:53:11 AM »
Along these lines, almost everything that Nathaniel Hawthorne ever wrote involved a theme, or motif; that is, he was typically concerned with the secret sins that are within all of us.  And this is a man who is considered one of the greats of American letters.  Or Dickens (as well as most English writers) who was often concerned with issues of class, or Faulkner, who has a large body of his work dedicated to the actions and exploits of an inter-related family in a single southern county?  These are a few of the best.  

But, ironically, we sometimes condemn architects for having a "predictable" style.  Why is this the case?  If these writers can become legends (and deservedly so) for doing as they did, then why is is that people would critique Dye for using railroad ties through the years, or Maxwell for his "rolls," or Macdonald and Raynor for their template holes (or variations on a theme, as Jay is calling it), or otherwise?

If indeed golf course designers are artists in the same sense as writers/sculptors/painters/etc. (and I believe the assumption here is that they are), if they honestly deserve the respect that other professional artists receive, then they should perhaps embrace such "criticism," for it is perhaps not criticism at all.  It is instead the sign of greatness to display an ideal in so many forms, to be able to expand on an idea and incorporate bits and pieces of a notion in every design in a recognizable, though independent fashion.  There should be no doubt that each course is different, but still, there should be no shame or regret that there are identifying features linking a given course to a given designer.  And more than this, if the theme is truly worthy and if the designer has used the landscape in a manner befitting itself (obviously a subjective notion), then the course will be universal, deserving of study, and perhaps, a test for the ages.


...to admit my mistakes most frankly, or to say simply what I believe to be necessary for the defense of what I have written, without introducing the explanation of any new matter so as to avoid engaging myself in endless discussion from one topic to another.     
               -Rene Descartes

Jay Flemma

Re:American Literature and Golf Course architecture
« Reply #5 on: October 06, 2006, 04:38:02 PM »
Exactly Steve...it's the same with great musicians...some songs and guitar licks work really well, some dont...you keep the wheat, you cast the chaff aside.  E.G.  Trey Anastasio plays the same great lick in "Slave to the Traffic Light" as he sometimes does in "Sample In A Jar."

Several archies have said exactly the same thing - they try some stuff out, they keep what works, throw the chaff aside and then move to the next job and add new things, while giving the old standards some play too...

Tags:
Tags:

An Error Has Occurred!

Call to undefined function theme_linktree()
Back