A Season in Dornoch: Golf and Life in the Scottish Highlands
By (Author) Lorne Rubenstein
Transworld Publishers Ltd
Mainstream Publishing
1st July 2005
20th March 2003
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Biography: sport
Golf
914.115204085
Paperback
256
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 16mm
181g
In 1977, Lorne Rubenstein, an avid golfer, first travelled to Dornoch in the Scottish Highlands. Young and adrift in life, he sought to uncover an authentic sense of self and turned instinctively to a place where his beloved game was purest. The experience had a profound effect on Rubenstein. Twenty-three years later, in 2000, now an established golf writer, Rubenstein returned to Dornoch to spend an entire summer. He rented a flat with his wife close to the Royal Dornoch Golf Course and set out to explore the area on many levels. Rubenstein writes about the melancholy history of the Highland Clearances, which left stunningly beautiful landscape sparsely populated to this day. He writes about the friendly and sometimes eccentric people who love their town, their golf and their single malt whiskey and delight in sharing them with visitors whom they recognize as kindred spirits, but most of all he writes about a summer lived around golf, in a community where golf is king and the golf course is part of the common lands where townspeople stroll of an evening. Playing here, Rubenstein gradually begins to relax, to return to golf as play, as opposed to a game of analysis and effort.
Rubenstein gives the reader a feel for what makes the appeal of the Highlands so enduring. He brings the place and its people to life -- Tom Watson, five-time British Open champion
One of golf's most gifted writers has done every fan of the game a great and entertaining service -- James Dodson, author of Final Rounds
Lorne Rubenstein has written a golf column for Golf and Mail since 1980. He is the author of many books and has won the National Magazine Award in Canada and three first-place awards from the Golf Writers Association of America.