While in Australia, Joe and I were treated like kings. During one gathering where we made new friends and matched faces to names, Mike Clayton went on about the best book featuring golf course architecture he had read in recent times ... and I had never heard of it! It was Peter Thomson’s book originally published a decade ago entitled
Lessons I Have Learned and recently reprinted by Slattery Media as
A Life in Golf. Chris Kane
very generously gave me his copy and I ingested the ~200 page book as we bounced around Oz and NZ.
Mike was spot on and happily, Geoff Slattery, the book’s publisher kindly agreed to work with GolfClubAtlas and let us conduct a ‘Feature Interview’ from the material in the book. Yes, I could have interviewed Mr. Thomson directly but why ask him to regurgitate what he had already so eloquently penned (with Steve Perkin's help)? Besides, this book is a must for golf architecture fans and I wanted to give it a shove. It can (and should!) be purchased at
https://itun.es/au/FpKbQ.l or
https://books.slatterymedia.com/store/viewItem/a-life-in-golf.
I don't want to keep repeating myself but Mr. Thomson is a devastatingly good writer. As most of you know, GolfClubAtlas is so named as a homage to
The World Atlas of Golf and the single most eye-opening entry in that tome is Thomson's Royal Melbourne. Interestingly enough in
A Life of Golf, Thomson’s kindest words aren't directed at Alister MacKenzie or the sprawling bunkers for which the Sandbelt is world-renowned. Not surprising for a five (!) time Open champion, he prefers smaller bunkers and doesn't mind, in the least, if they are sometimes hidden from view. Those beliefs are evident among his designs. Born in 1929 this student of the game, world-traveler and keen observer is a true link to the Golden Age. When he speaks, his words carry clout.
After the most recent restoration at Pinehurst, I gave a talk there and wistfully suggested how great it would have been if Ballesteros had played the restored No.2 in his prime. Watching the Maestro play shots around those greens and win the US Open would have been marvelous. Such an occurrence would also have been a testament to how the USGA had progressed in their course set-ups. In another Walter Mitty-like moment, I think about Thomson and Oakmont. What a delight to watch one of the game's great tacticians plot his way around that hazard-laden course. If Mother Nature cooperates and Oakmont is firm, I reckon that Thomson's mind and putting would have enabled him a real chance in his prime, even if he was approaching the greens with x club more than the bombers.
Anyway, this publication reminds me of Harvey Penick's uber-successful
The Little Red Book and it deserves to do just as well. Hope you enjoy his words in this June ‘interview’, get the book and learn as much as I did.
Best,