About the Author:
John Steinbreder is the originator and writer of the "Club Life" column that spawned this project. He is an award-winning journalist with more than 20 years experience and the author of six books, including Golf Courses of the US Open and Golf Rules and Etiquette for Dummies. In addition to being senior writer for Golfweek, he is a contributing writer to Met Golfer and the golf columnist for Departures, the American Express Platinum card publication. He lives in Easton, CT.
Review:
Leave it to a golf writer to come up with a bunch of stories that entertain, inform, and generally make you shake your head in wonder. (Bob Weisgerber Golf Today)
Upholders of the traditions of golf, both on and off the course, will find enjoyment in John Steinbreder's knowing and funny Club Life. (Charles Monagan Connecticut Magazine)
His book may not improve your swing, but it will give you a better understanding of the things that really matter about the game, including the men's grill room, club governing committees, and the diminished presence of caddies to haul your sticks around the course. (Jillian Bandes The Weekly Standard)
John Steinbreder's collected essays are what The Federalist Papers were to the framing of the Constitution: a manifesto, a blueprint, a ringing summons-to-arms to the better angels of our golfing nature. For the golfer who really cares, a must! (Michael M. Thomas, columnist for the New York Observer)
When it comes to golf, John Steinbreder is a certified curmudgeon. He is ruthless in his defense of tradition and uncompromising in his love of the game's simple virtues. Club Life reads like something that fell off the shelf of a classic golf library. I always knew that modern country clubs could be pretentious, but until I read Club Life I didn't realize how absurd and funny those pretensions really were. (Bradley Klein, architect editor for Golfweek magazine and author of the award-winning book, Discovering Donald Ross)
John Steinbreder knows the terrain of the modern American golf club better than anyone around. He's also a storyteller of the first rank ― a combination that make his examination of club life wholly unique and important. (James Dodson, author of Final Rounds and Ben Hogan: An American Life)
Are you sure you want to join a golf club? Read John Steinbreder's Club Life very carefully before deciding. As hilarious as it is insightful, as tender and as scathing as it is true, Club Life is the unvarnished accounting of what really goes on at private clubs both on and off the golf course. "You can't make this up," Steinbreder writes, and of course you don't need to since reality has given this skilled and experienced scribe more material than he could ever include in a single volume. (Duncan Christy, editor, Sky Magazine)
John [Steinbreder] is not only a gifted storyteller - but a wonderful observer of people. Club Life will leave you laughing and cheering. (Jim Nantz, CBS Sports)
John Steinbreder knows that the truly important action in golf takes place not on tour but at home, in the clubs where you and I happily waste our weekends. His book is about the game's most pressing issues: the drinks in the grill room, the logos on the shirts, and the cell phones in the clubhouse. He's an ideal guide to golf as we know it - a good walk improved. (David Owen, Staff writer for The New Yorker and author of My Usual Game: Adventures in Golf and The Making of the Masters)
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.