Features
- Cover Type: Paperback with 256 pages
- Published by: Kensington March 1, 2007
- Written in: English
- ISBN 10 Number: 0758212704
- ISBN 13 Number: 978-0758212702
-
Book Dimensions:
8.1 x 5.4 x 0.8 inches
- Weighs: 8 ounces
From Booklist
Easygoing Elliott Goodman, an amateur golfer, finds himself on the operating table after a heart attack and is confronted by God. The Old Boy wants to know why the entirely ordinary Elliott should be allowed to live and, when Elliott's reasons seem lame, challenges him to 18 holes. Rather than play himself, God sends substitutes from history, including Leonardo, John Lennon, Columbus, Babe Ruth, Gandhi, Joan of Arc, Marilyn Monroe, Beethoven, Ben Hogan, etc. Mitchell doesn't lack nerve: the hole with Socrates is narrated as a Socratic dialogue, and the hole with Shakespeare as a rather dreadful attempt at a Shakespearean play. Much of the story is superficial, and many of the celebrity cameos are unconvincing, but Mitchell, like his hero, strikes an agreeable tone and is often amusing.
John MortCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
Product Description
So
why should I save you?"
Thats the question Elliott Goodman hears in the OR as hes about to have emergency surgery following a heart attack. But it isnt Elliotts surgeon whos asking. Its God. As in The Almighty. And God has a wager for Elliott. He challenges him to an eighteen-hole golf match. If Elliott wins, he is saved; if he loses
So begins this witty, insightful, very funny, and wholly unique novel about golf and life and the lessons learned from both.
To be fair (isnt He always?), God sends down eighteen legendary opponents to play against Elliott and hopefully teach him a few tricks along the way. From Leonardo da Vinci (nice clubs) to Marilyn Monroe (nice
everything), Babe Ruth (pass the hot dogs), Abraham Lincoln (cheater!), and fourteen other luminaries, including Moses, John Lennon, Joan of Arc, Picasso, W.C. Fields, Socrates, Babe Didrikson Zaharias, Beethoven, Gandhi, and Shakespeare, Elliott squares off against some of the most extraordinary people whove ever lived. As shots are analyzed, balls enter bunkers, and
Freud drives the cart (control freak), Elliott has a chance to examine his life and his form, to see what he can correct or improve before meeting his ultimate challenger.
Bighearted and delightfully original, Bob Mitchells Match Made in Heaven is a grand celebration of golf and a profound parable of traveling our own personal fairways in a game where no effort is wasted, and every failure is just another chance to try again.
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
Reader Reviews
This review is from: Match Made In Heaven: A Tale of Golf (Hardcover)
Elliott Goodman is about to die. He's had a heart attack and the doctors know he's beyond help. And he is--until God offers a bargain: beat me in a round of golf, and you're saved. But how do you beat God? God being ultimately fair sends 18 people to play 18 holes of golf with Elliott. These are the people that Elliott must beat, one hole at a time. Golf is a game where you only master the moment, but what if you have a new opponent for each hole, with a golf/life lesson each time? How would you fare? Could you focus teeing it up against Leonardo Da Vinci, W.C. Fields, Moses, Freud, and others? And you have to handle a conversation with them based on their field of expertise applied to your life situation and this particular round of golf! This book is for the thinking golfer. There are great tips along the way when you look for them--but you've got to be prepared to think through how golf applies to the great game of life as well. Armchair Interviews says: Not a quick read, but an enjoyable one.