Tom,
For those of us who are in the not-completely-initiated category, would you have time for a little background? I took a look at an early edition of the guide in a bookstore in the Village of Pinehurst five or six years ago, but did not want to spring for the book at the $$$$ they were asking. Here are some of the thngs I'd like to know (maybe just answer by reference to other threads on this site).
A brief history of the guide? What is the scope of the revision? Are you just adding new courses? Are you going to include peviously-rated courses and ratings on an updated, or not, basis? In general, how do you decide what courses to include? For example, why not the "best in Alaska"? Granted, it would be an expensive and time-consuming trip (I know, because I'm going there in several weeks, though not for golf), but what the heck. For the folks there, those courses are all they've got. What are the ratings criteria? (I've seen those, but don't recall where.) Anything else by way of background?
Thanks, Carl
Carl:
Just as well you did not spring for the $$$, since a new edition will make the collectors' value of the previous editions go down considerably.
The original edition of The Confidential Guide was given to 40 of the people who had helped me the most in completing my travels around the golf world from 1980-87. The intent was to repay them by sharing what I'd learned about which courses were worth the effort to visit. It also allowed me to muse on my thoughts about good and bad golf architecture, through the prism of course reviews.
I had never considered publishing the book, but once the word was out about it in the golf business, I'd get calls from people who had pirate copies, and all sorts of feedback about it and requests for it ... and all that before the internet existed! Anyway, I was encouraged by several people to get it out to a wider audience, and when times got slow for my fledgling design business in the mid-90's, I put it out there -- first in a limited edition of 1000 copies [with no pictures], and later in a "real" published version which sold 12,000 copies.
I have not revisited the book since 1996, because I agreed with several friends' advice that it would be unwise to play both designer and critic at the same time. But I've missed getting out to see others' work (old and new), and I've missed writing about golf courses. But with the boom in building new courses about over, I've got the time to think about a thorough revision. And my status in the business is secure enough now that I don't think I'll be criticized as writing the book to advance my design career.
The original book included reviews of EVERY course I had ever seen -- one of the most controversial parts of it was that it had merciless reviews of some courses that were never intended to be anything more than a place to hit it around. The new version will have many more courses to draw from, and there won't be room for them all, so the focus will shift to courses I would recommend for you to play. The old reviews will be thoroughly edited if I've seen the course again, and maybe even if I haven't. The book will still be critical -- it wouldn't be true to the original if it wasn't dead honest and no-holds-barred -- but it probably won't rankle as many people this way. [Or maybe it will, since other designers aren't busy, either, and will have plenty of time to complain.]
I would like to include as many places around the world as I can -- some people will be surprised at the scope of it -- because golf is more of a worldwide game than it was 20 years ago, and there is a whole new audience for the book IF it includes enough courses that potential readers have played. But I'm thinking that Alaska is one place few people would ever think of traveling with their clubs, so unless someone tells me of a great course in Alaska that's flying under the radar, I'll probably skip going there, and go review somewhere more interesting, like, say the Himalayan Golf Club in Nepal. [Google it, and let me know if you see anything similar in Alaska.]