I was looking at Jim Sherma's thread about his first trip to Ballyneal (one of only 3-4 courses that I really feel I must play one day). Posters generously offered many suggestions -- e.g. play from different sets of tees, during a single round and/or over the course of several rounds; embrace match play and forget about your score; use hickories; play the whiskey circuit etc. And while all these suggestions come from posters who know and love the course, and all are well meant, I found myself thinking "Screw all that. On my first visit to Ballyneal, I'm going to pick ONE SET of tees, say the whites [edit: one set of "teeing grounds", say the middle-ish] and play those for a full 18 holes; and I'm going to bring a scorecard and pencil; and I'm going to play with the best equipment I have and try to shoot the best possible score I can; and I'm going to play the course just the way the score card says, from 1 through 18, in that order -- and then on my second round I'm going to do exactly the same thing, i.e. I will GOLF on a wonderful golf COURSE in the way it was DESIGNED to play.
I'm sure Tom and the team have created a place of freedom and fun there, and that they'd be open to (and maybe anticipated) all these variations mentioned above. But I'm also sure that they took time and great effort find the best possible ROUTING for 18 sequential golf holes over that terrain so as to create a great journey and field of play, and that they factored in the WIND and established tee boxes and placed HAZARDS/FEATURES with great care and assuming that golfers would be playing appropriate (for them) sets of tees and trying to score as well as they could -- which is, after all, a primary if not main goal of the game.
In short, Tom and the team wrote a novel/book, and wrote it in a way that assumes that (and is best understood and appreciated by) people starting on PAGE ONE, with their glasses on (if they need glasses to read properly), and continuing PAGE by PAGE to the end, where the conclusion/culmination of the story is satisfying because the writer's skill was used to make it that way, to build from the beginning to the end.
Why in goodness name would I start a book on page 116? What lack of generosity and respect could possibly possess me so that I said to myself "I don't give a damn what the writer was doing or thought he was doing with all his planning and care and concern, and I don't care how much talent he might have -- I'm gonna read this book the way I want to, and get out of it what I want to get out of it, not what the writer tells me to or hopes that i do....because I know better!"
In short, why the heck wouldn't I play Ballyneal the way Tom designed it? What use and value is all his talent and thought and time if I'd be perfectly prepared to get there for the first time and start on the 3rd tee and play to the 6th green? If THAT'S the way golfers are gonna play it, they could've hired ME (or a MONKEY) to design it.