Available Formats
How Golf Can Save Your Life
By (Author) Drew Millard
Abrams
Abrams Press
15th May 2025
United States
General
Non Fiction
Memoirs
Coping with / advice about depression and other mood disorders
796.352019
Paperback
240
Width 140mm, Height 210mm, Spine 29mm
Now in paperback, a smart, insightful, funny, moving (Shea Serrano) exploration of golf, an often-misunderstood game, and the valuable roles it can play in our lives
Golf saved Drew Millards life, and he wants it to save yours, too.
Drew Millard loves golf. Were talking climbing-a-mountain, jumping-over-the-moon, standing-outside-golfs-window-holding-a-boom-box levels of love. As a kid, hed enjoyed the game, but after college, his clubs had been gathering dust in his parents basement. And then a bout with depression led him back home to haul them out of the unfinished storage area under the stairs.
It was what the doctor had ordered. In addition to medication and therapy, Drew needed to exercise. Exercise was not something he did. But golf Sure, why not As Drew fumbled his way through his first round in years, he discovered that sucking at golf was his new calling, one that helped him find a sense of balance and rhythmboth on the course and in his own mind.
Drews deep emotional connection to the game inspired him to write this book, and his passion is infectious. Combining great storytelling with fascinating historical tidbits and moving personal insights, he writes about everything from how golf taught him to be a better listener, son, and friend, to how to slow down, appreciate what he has, and keep fighting the good fight. Along the way, he demystifies the customs, history, and rules of the game.
Brimming with personality, accessibility, and a freewheeling spirit, How Golf Can Save Your Life is a celebration of the sport and an examination of all it offers. Read it and fall in love with golffor the first time or all over again.
A terrific and quite funny book. * Michael Munger, American Institute for Economic Research *
Drew Millard is a writer from North Carolina. His work has appeared in VICE, GQ, The Nation, The Believer, and the New York TimesSunday Magazine. He lives in Philadelphia and has a handicap that hovers between ten and 14.