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Playing Through: A Year of Life and Links Along the Scottish Coast
 
 
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Playing Through: A Year of Life and Links Along the Scottish Coast [Hardcover]

Curtis Gillespie (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

May 4, 2004
In this lyrical, evocative, and heartfelt memoir, Curtis Gillespie chronicles the year he spent with his wife and daughters in quaint Gullane, Scotland. Against the backdrop of a uniquely beautiful landscape, Gillespie deftly explores the bonds of fatherhood and friendship, and the irresistible lure of links golf.

When Curtis Gillespie first played a round in Gullane, he was a graduate student on the golf team at the University of St. Andrews. He wrote to his father back in Canada about the unmatched peacefulness and loveliness of the place and promised that the two of them would golf there together someday. After his father passed away before they could play the Scottish course, Gillespie vowed to return himself. Thirteen years after his first visit, Gillespie uproots his wife and two young daughters and moves to Gullane, hoping to learn something about himself, and his life, in the process.
Early on Gillespie teams up with two aging local golfers named Archie and Jack (members at Gullane Golf Club for more than a century between them), and the ensuing friendship that blossoms between the elderly Scotsmen and the young Canadian infuses Playing Through with a sense of enchanting familiarity and easygoing charm. Gillespie samples courses like Muirfield and St. Andrews under the delightfully gruff guidance of Archie and Jack, soaks up the natural beauty of the countryside, and sets out to capture the full flavor of village life, haggis and all. The gregarious and eccentric locals, the stunning setting, the town’s history, and even his family’s response to their new life all converge in a warm, wonderful story rich with comedy and insight.

Skillfully interwoven through the narrative are anecdotes about Gillespie’s much-missed father, an ordinary man who inspired extraordinary love from his son. And though his father is not there to share in Gullane’s charms, the experience of moving to the village and coming to know its inhabitants helps Gillespie through an unexpected passage of discovery about his father, himself, and his own journey through fatherhood.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In a book that is part golf travelogue and part mushy memoir, Gillespie (The Progress of an Object in Motion; Someone Like That) uproots his family from their home in Edmonton, Canada, and moves to the coast of Scotland for a year to write and hit the links. Stitching together random memories, quaint observations on Scottish life, tributes to his deceased father, tidy domestic homilies and a sprinkling of golf yarns, Gillespie wanders across time and space, and generally gets entangled in the thicket of his own solipsism. Although he is intermittently humorous, charming and even moving, his earnest sentimentality smothers most of the book's touching moments and gives his anecdotes a manufactured, too-perfect quality. The most redeeming passages involve Gillespie's frequent golf partners, two crusty old men named Jack and Archie whose grouchy, plainspoken banter supplies a welcome respite. Although the writing is easygoing, there are some forced metaphors and a few genuine clunkers: "my tee shot, which had been little more than five yards off the fairway, had gone into an area of rough that seemed to be the site of some deeply twisted agricultural experiment to develop strains of vegetation that had learned to tie their stalks in knots." Readers looking for a book about golf or Scotland may be disappointed.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Another Canadian writer has done what every introspective golfer dreams of doing: traipsing off to Scotland for an extended stay in an idyllic village near a classic links golf course. Like his friend and colleague Lorne Rubenstein, whose Season in Dornoch (2001) is one of the finest of golf memoirs, Gillespie, too, lugged golf clubs and computer to the Scottish linksland, landing at Gullane, where he, his wife, and their young daughter spent a year folding themselves into the ebb and flow of village life. Along with the expected profiles of village eccentrics and recollections of near-perfect moments on the links, Gillespie devotes much of his attention to remembering his father--a stern, demanding man but one who left an indelible mark on his son. In Final Rounds (1996), James Dodson describes a golfing trip to Scotland with his dying father; Gillespie never made that trip with his father, but golf and Scotland become, nevertheless, the catalysts that allow him to erase the emotional distance that separated father and son in life. A moving personal story and a treat for armchair golfers and travelers. Bill Ott
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Crown (May 4, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1400052238
  • ISBN-13: 978-1400052233
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 6.1 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,400,096 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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4.0 out of 5 stars Not Just about Golf, August 2, 2010
By 
Jeremy Deason (Easthampton, MA United States) - See all my reviews
I picked this up at the library searching for books about golfing in Scotland for an upcoming trip. What I found was a book that was about much more than golf. The author did a great job going back and forth between his time in Scotland and memories of his father. While I would have loved to read more about the golf courses, I thoroughly enjoyed the tales of his father, friends in Scotland, and the innocence of his young children. A great read for anyone, not just lovers of golf...and I really want to play Gullane!
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
In my mind, the story always begins in my bedroom, in 1987, in a flat at 2 Alfred Place, St Andrews, when I awoke to find my narrow, messy bed had not its usual one occupant, but two. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
ist tee, links golf, golf team
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Gullane Golf Club, East Lothian, Dirleton Castle, North Berwick, Gullane Hill, High Street, Old Course, Aberlady Bay, Old Mike, Christopher Robin, Firth of Forth, Lammermuir Hills, North Sea, Gullane Primary, Lammerview Terrace, University of St Andrews, Jack Nicklaus, Jovey's Neuk, Michael Cox, Port Sudan, Gullane Bents, Gullane Nos, Gullane Point, Nigel Tranter, Open Championship
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Citations (learn more)
This book cites 8 books:
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Books on Related Topics (learn more)
 
Golf in Scotland by Allan McAllister Ferguson
The Scottish Golf Book by Malcolm Campbell
 

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