KEVIN COOK’S
“TOMMY’S HONOR” WINS
2007 USGA BOOK HONORS
Far Hills, N.J. – Kevin
Cook’s “Tommy’s
Honor: The Story of Old Tom Morris and Young Tom Morris, Golf’s Founding Father
and Son” has been named the recipient of the United States Golf Association’s
2007 Herbert Warren Wind Book Award.
“Tommy’s
Honor” provides a wonderfully detailed historical account of Old and Young Tom
Morris, the father and son from St. Andrews who dominated
professional golf in Scotland during the latter half
of the 19th century. The book depicts the dawn of professional golf,
highlighting the rivalry between the two as they competed against one another
and their peers in the early years of the British Open Championship. The
personalities of Old and Young Tom are richly portrayed. The result is a
textured evocation of one of the most important periods in the game’s
formation.
“It’s
a great pleasure to get the Herbert Warren Wind Award,” said Cook.
“I fell in love with the Morrises’ story in 1986 on
my first trip to St. Andrews. I hope the award
brings readers to the book.”
A
former editor-in-chief of Golf Magazine,
Cook has written about the game for 25 years. He also was a senior editor at Sports Illustrated and executive editor
of T&L Golf, and has written for GQ,
Men’s Journal, Portfolio, Golf Digest and
many other magazines.
Cook will be given the award on April 9 in Augusta, Ga., at the Golf Writers
Association of America’s annual awards dinner during the week of the Masters
Tournament.
The
Herbert Warren Wind Book Award was established in 1987. The award recognizes
and honors outstanding contributions to golf literature while attempting to
broaden the public’s interest in, and knowledge of, the game of golf.
Wind,
who died in 2005, was the famed New
Yorker and Sports Illustrated
writer who coined the phrase “Amen Corner” at Augusta
National. He is the only writer to win the Bob
Jones Award, the USGA’s highest honor.
The
USGA is currently accepting submissions for the 2008 Herbert Warren Wind Book
Award. For more information, contact Doug
Stark, the USGA Museum’s curator of education,
at (908) 234-2300
or dstark@usga.org.
To
be eligible, a book must be an original full-length work about golf, written in
English, and published in the preceding year. “Tommy’s
Honor” was published by Gotham Books, a division of
the Penguin Group of New York, N.Y. It was selected from
among more than 40 submissions.
“Tommy’s
Honor” can be purchased by contacting the USGA Order Department at (800)
336-4446
or www.usgapubs.com.
The
USGA is the national governing body of golf in this country and Mexico, a combined territory
that includes more than half the world’s golfers and golf courses.
The
Association’s most visible role is played out each season in conducting 13
national championships, including the U.S. Open, U.S. Women’s Open and U.S.
Senior Open. Ten additional USGA
national championships are exclusively for amateurs, and include the U.S.
Amateur and the U.S Women’s Amateur.
The
USGA also writes the Rules of Golf, conducts equipment testing, provides expert
course maintenance consultations, funds research for better turf and a better
environment, maintains a Handicap System and administers an ongoing "For
the Good of the Game" grants program, which has allocated more than $58
million over 11 years to successful programs that bring the game’s values to
youths from disadvantaged backgrounds and people with disabilities. For more
information about the USGA, visit www.usga.org.
Media
Contact: Craig Smith (csmith@usga.org),
Web address: www.usga.org ,USGA phone: (908)
234-2300