Wayne:
Yeah, that's not the original version. It's actually the third. The first [40 copies] was printed on a dot-matrix printer; the second [1000 copies] was typeset, but with no photos.
Tim:
Yes, the Doak Scale and its number ratings were printed in the first version of the book. Remember, though, that was for my friends, and the number was intended to be a kind of shorthand if you were making a trip to Scotland [or wherever] and trying to decide which courses to see in a given area. They were never intended to try and rank the best courses in the world.
But, as Jeff says correctly, once I got a bigger audience, I got more careful about how strongly I recommended a non-mainstream course, because mainstream readers probably wouldn't be as excited about flying across the ocean to see Pennard as I was. So I tended to keep those numbers lower than I felt about the course, while singing its praises in the prose.
The reviews are the most important part of the book. The numbers are a short-cut, not the point of it.
It actually pains me to see that I've got just over 100 courses rated as 8's or higher . . . I have never been aiming for any quota of courses, but after participating in so many rankings I fear that my perceptions have started to be poisoned by them. I do know that whenever I fill out a ranking ballot, I vote for well less than 100 courses on my first time through, and then have to go back and reconsider moving courses up a notch, since I have seen most of the candidates and if I've seen 97 of the top 100 in the world, I ought to be voting for about that same number. [IMO, nobody should vote for 100 - even Paul Rudovsky - as you should have some respect for the places you haven't seen.]