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The Caddie Was a Reindeer: And Other Tales of Extreme Recreation

AUTHOR: Steve Rushin
ISBN: 0871138786

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The Caddie Was a Reindeer: And Other Tales of Extreme Recreation
- Book Review,
by Steve Rushin


From Publishers Weekly
Don’t let the word "caddie" in the title fool you—this is not a golf book. In a way, it’s not even a sports book, although it consists of essays, columns and features that Rushin, a senior writer for Sports Illustrated, originally wrote for the magazine. Rushin’s real interest is the daring, dangerous and downright wacky things people do in the name of sport and competition. He gets a jolt out of finding thrill-seekers and joining them on their exploits, bringing his wry sense of humor along for the ride. What’s it like to play golf in the Arctic? The answer can be found in the title essay, which details Rushin’s own expedition in the "Land of the Midnight Sun." How can a skinny guy eat 50.5 hotdogs in 12 minutes? Rushin talks to some of the world’s top competitive eaters. Why would someone ride a roller coaster for more than 1,000 hours? Rushin does his best to figure it out. Author of the widely acclaimed Road Swing: One Man’s Journey into the Soul of America’s Sports, Rushin has a gift for spotting absurdities and recording them in witty turns of phrase. Hockey players, he says, have "crossword puzzle smiles," while a man who spends his days in a trailer, journeying from one stadium tailgate party to another, is "the unholy offspring of Homer and Homer Simpson." His writing is so much fun that he can be forgiven for a few groaners, such as his reaction to the man who tells him that in Finland, golf is played in the snow with balls that are purple. Says Rushin: "I imagine they must be." Competition of one kind or another is the backdrop to all of Rushin’s essays, but this book is not just fun and games. Also included is a heartfelt tribute to Rushin’s wife—the basketball superstar Rebecca Lobo—and an insightful look at the people and forces that have shaped modern-day pro sports. Whether you’re an avid sports fan or just looking for an entertaining read, this book will make you both laugh and think.Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.


From Booklist
Three years out of college in 1991, Rushin became Sports Illustrated's youngest senior writer. His work is imaginative, quirky, and insightful. His folks wanted him to become a doctor, and sometimes, he points out, it seems as if he did; after all, much of his time is spent questioning naked strangers who smell strongly of liniment. In the title piece, he plays the world's northernmost golf course, in which a player can hook a tee shot into another country. In "Beers & Shots," he examines the odd world of competitive darts, and in "I Believe in Basketball," he eloquently states his love for hoops. Elsewhere, he eats his way across America's stadiums, taking time out to profile a man who earns a living tailgating at sports events. Not to be missed is a portrait of a group that rides monster roller coasters for hours at a time. In the often-cynical world of sports journalism, it is a pleasure to encounter a writer who seeks out the humanity and humor in competition. Wes Lukowsky
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved


Book Description
For more than a decade, Steve Rushin has been one of our premiere sportswriters, a four-time finalist for the National Magazine Award-most recently in 2004. Publishers Weekly listed his previous book, Road Swing, among the Best Books of 1998. It was also named one of the Top 100 Sports Books of All Time by Sports Illustrated, for which Rushin writes the tremendously popular "Air and Space" column. The Caddie Was a Reindeer collects the best of Rushin's beloved columns and acclaimed features. Rushin takes us on everything from an eating tour of America's baseball stadiums, where the jumbo dog is being replaced by tofu and sushi, to a 180-mph journey through the mountains of Germany, where the world's most treacherous racetrack is now open to anyone insane enough to drive it. When not tossing back pints with the King of Darts in London or participating in "excessive nightclubbing" with World Cup soccer players, Rushin offers his skewed takes on old standbys like baseball, hockey, and football. Enlightening, hilarious, and often unexpectedly heartwarming, The Caddie Was a Reindeer leaves us laughing out loud about the sports we didn't know existed, and reminds us why we love the sports we do.


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         Book Review

The Caddie Was a Reindeer: And Other Tales of Extreme Recreation
- Book Reviews,
by Steve Rushin

The Caddie Was a Reindeer: And Other Tales of Extreme Recreation

FROM THE PUBLISHER

"In The Caddie Was a Reindeer Steve Rushin circumnavigates the globe with his golf clubs - less pole-to-pole than flagstick-to-flagstick - in pursuit of extreme recreation. In the Arctic Circle, he meets ice golfers, one of whom explains: "We play on snow, in freezing temperatures, with balls that are purple." To which Rushin can only reply: "Yes, well, I imagine they must be."" "On Bali, in the Indian Ocean, he forsakes his lob wedge for a lava wedge on a golf course laid out in the crater of a volcano. ("Sure the volcano is long inactive, but so are Tony Orlando and Dawn. Should I not fear a return to activity?")" "In Minnesota, he watches the National Amputee Golf Tournament, where one participant tells him, "I literally have one foot in the grave."" The Caddie Was a Reindeer is a ride to everywhere: to south London (where Rushin downs pints with the King of Darts) and the Champs-Elysees (where the author indulges in "excessive nightclubbing" with World Cup soccer stars); to Japan (where Rushin eats soba noodles with the world champion of competitive eating) and Germany (where he drives James Bond's convertible on the world's most dangerous Formula One racetrack). This collection is not a body of work: it's a body of play.

FROM THE CRITICS

Library Journal

Popular Sports Illustrated columnist Rushin collects his favorite pieces, including one about his trip above the Arctic Circle for some "ice golf" (a reindeer really did carry the clubs). Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Wry essays on sport and its enthusiasts by an agile writer (Road Swing, 1998) who's likely to discern the human-interest story behind the statistics. Rushin, a four-time finalist for the National Magazine Award, has traveled worldwide for the "Air and Space" column in Sports Illustrated, where these 24 essays and shorter pieces originally appeared. Along the way, he's developed an appealing style that combines deadpan humor with a focus on offbeat events (lucrative darts championships, an amputee golf championship, competitive eating) or unusual settings (the Topps baseball-card company offices, Germany's most dangerous racetrack). Some pieces give prominence to Rushin's personal misadventures; the title essay, for example, describes his "June golf tour of Scandinavia," which brought him near the Arctic Circle, a region where one can "banana-slice a ball so badly that it not only travels backward but also travels back in time." Elsewhere, he takes a broader, historical view: a piece rife with period details and hilarious pseudo-nostalgia examines the bizarre circumstances that made the 1962 Mets the worst ball team ever. Similarly, the 60-page "How We Got Here" explains how TV and personalities like Roone Arledge transformed spectator sports from a regional, blue-collar phenomenon into the "axis on which the world turns"; Rushin is observant, but arguably pulls his punches here. "Tour de France" offers a pungent snapshot of European soccer, as embittered English rowdies clash with colorful French, Italian, and Brazilian fans. "High Rollers" covers roller-coaster cultists who ride for days on end, a breed of enthusiasm also seen among the amateur racers on Germany's "Green Hell," theNurburgring track deemed too dangerous for Formula One. "Planet Nagano" argues that the 1998 Winter Olympics was well served by Japan's constant blending of normality with the perverse. At his best, Rushin is reminiscent of such other tart commentators on American leisure as Carl Hiaasen and Padgett Powell; his skillfulness enables him to wring entertainment even out of such chestnuts as the epic Yankees-Red Sox fan rivalry. Engaging, entertaining, and more laid-back than many sports books. First printing of 25,000. Agent: Esther Newberg/ICM


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