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After a trip home for the Fourth of July, Joe Smith and his two
brothers are on their way back to their construction jobs in
Roswell, New Mexico when they run out of gas on a seldom-used oil
lease road. The night is pitch-black. They get out of Joe's new
1947 Ford and start walking. They want to find some gasoline or a
telephone. Instead they find the adventure of a life time.
Everybody told Leona Bilbrey she looked just like Marilyn Monroe...
everybody. And ever since last summer when she got those MM
initials tattooed on her rear she had felt it was in the stars that
she would be the next Marilyn Monroe. There was only a couple of
small problems that had her held back. For one thing, she lived in
Muskogee, Oklahoma and it was a good fifteen hundred miles from
Hollywood. The other small problem she had was that she had no
money. None. But those were minor things as far as she was
concerned. She just knew somehow, someway she was going to be the
next Marilyn Monroe. She just didn't know how.
What does it mean to be an old guy? The shock of becoming an old
guy can be devastating, but there is hope. Bill Kilpatrick wrote
How to be an Old Guy as a comprehensive guide to life for any guy
sixty or older. He also got some help from legendary comedian Sid
Caesar, who provides the foreword. Some of the topics covered
include sex and marriage, coping with stress, staying tuned in, the
loss of a spouse, meeting new people, the pet trap, maintaining
health, and losing one's marbles.
A hundred years or so ago, kids growing up in St. Andrews,
Scotland, kids like Bill Kilpatrick’s father, took to golf as
naturally as to breathing. Accordingly, the prevailing opinion was
that any layabout could play golf, whereas a greenkeeper was
someone to be reckoned with. And a greenkeeper (a term much
preferred to “golf course superintendent”) was what
Kilpatrick’s father became. Kilpatrick’s memoir of growing up
on golf courses is at once a window on another time—when golf was
played mainly with balata balls, hickory shafts, and handmade
spoons, mashies, and cleeks—and a ground-level view of what
maintaining a golf course meant when artisanship, instinct, and
experience carried the day. A charming narrative of a boy’s
relationship with his adored, occasionally impatient, and always
forgiving father, Brassies, Mashies, and Bootleg Scotch takes us to
some of the most notable golf clubs in America and introduces us to
a delightful cast of characters, from giants of golf history to
behind-the-scenes eccentrics to walk-on stars like New York Giants
pitcher Hal Schumacher. Readers get a rare glimpse of a vanished
world through Kilpatrick’s recollections of the daily routines of
his father as a dedicated greenkeeper and of his own experiences as
a caddy on the courses that were his family’s way of life.
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