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Chicken Soup for the Golfer's Soul: Stories of Insight, Inspiration and Laughter on the Links

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Shares stories written by golfers, pros, and caddies on the memorable moments of the game, sportsmanship, and obstacles that must be overcome.

Audio Cassette

First published May 12, 1999

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About the author

Jack Canfield

1,286 books1,751 followers
Jack Canfield is an American motivational speaker and author. He is best known as the co-creator of the "Chicken Soup for the Soul" book series, which currently has over 124 titles and 100 million copies in print in over 47 languages. According to USA Today, Canfield and his writing partner, Mark Victor Hansen, were the top-selling authors in the United States in 1997.

Canfield received a BA in Chinese History from Harvard University and a Masters from University of Massachusetts. He has worked as a teacher, a workshop facilitator, and a psychotherapist.

Canfield is the founder of "Self Esteem Seminars" in Santa Barbara, and "The Foundation for Self Esteem" in Culver City, California. The stated mission of Self Esteem Seminars is to train entrepreneurs, educators, corporate leaders and employees to achieve their personal and professional goals. The focus of The Foundation for Self Esteem is to train social workers, welfare recipients and human resource professionals.

In 1990,he shared with author Mark Victor Hansen his idea for the Chicken Soup for the Soul series. After three years, the two had compiled sixty-eight stories.

Canfield has appeared on numerous television shows, including Good Morning America, 20/20, Eye to Eye, CNN's Talk Back Live, PBS, The Oprah Winfrey Show, The Montel Williams Show, Larry King Live and the BBC.

Canfield's most recent book, The Success Principles (2005), shares 64 principles that he claims can make people more successful. In 2006, he appeared in the DVD, "The Secret," and shared his insights on the Law of Attraction and tips for achieving success in personal and professional life.

Jack Canfield was born on August 19, 1944, in Fort Worth, TX. He is the son of Elmer and Ellen (a homemaker; maiden name, Taylor). He attended high school at Linsly Military Institute, Wheeling, WV, 1962. He went to college at Harvard University, B.A., 1966; University of Massachusetts at Amherst, M.Ed., 1973. Canfield married Judith Ohlbaum in 1971 (divorced, November 1976); he married Georgia Lee Noble on September 9, 1978 (divorced, December 1999); he married Inga Marie Mahoney on July 4, 2001; children: (first marriage) Oran, David, Kyle, Dania; (second marriage) Christopher Noble. He is a Democrat and a Christian, and his hobbies include tennis, travel, skiing, running, billiards, reading, and guitar.

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5 stars
45 (30%)
4 stars
57 (38%)
3 stars
34 (22%)
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13 (8%)
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Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews
Profile Image for Glenn Van.
56 reviews3 followers
February 14, 2019
Not particularly funny at all and I found no little story that was any good for my soul. The average golfer and reader doesnt exactly shed tears for the problems of the country clubs upper crust.
Fortunately it only hit the ole pocket for a buck and a half at the thrift store.
Profile Image for Nancy Prins.
245 reviews2 followers
February 5, 2022
I have always enjoyed several of the Chicken Soup series of books and this one was no exception. Because of heredity and example I have always been highly competitive, especially on the golf course. In reading several of these stories I hope they will inspire me to look at golf and all it brings to my life differently. This book had me laughing and crying and inspired by the golf recollections of pros and amateurs alike.
Profile Image for Ted Hinkle.
548 reviews5 followers
January 25, 2021
A heartwarming compilation of meaningful golf stories. I thoroughly enjoyed the stories and the relationship to life's challenges. Having a tough day, on or off the links? Pick up your CHICKEN SOUP FOR THE GOLFER'S SOUL, randomly page through an inspirational story and get back on course, with a smile. Thanks to my daughter for gifting.
Profile Image for JD Waggy.
1,286 reviews61 followers
February 20, 2023
This is proof both that I have an alarming amount of stubbornness and that I am wildly cruel to myself, because I finished it. So there.

This is in my possession because once upon a time I was, in fact, a golfer. I had my own clubs. I understood the lingo. I almost tried out for a team, because I was 12 at the time. Now, I am angsty and old and can't be anywhere near golf without being wildly aware of how it is a classist, racist, economic disaster of a past time that continues weird gender stereotypes with a vengeance and also does silly things to pants. As an attempt to connect with that hobby, I was gifted this offshoot of the Chicken Soup sweep of the 90s, a vast array of essay collections designed to be heartwarming and soul-soothing.

They are not. Most specifically, they are not in the reality of the year of our Lord 2023 because the viewpoint is exactly that--the year of our Lord. One Lord, one type of woman, one type of man, one way to play the game. This is white Christianity with a club membership and buffed-clean cleats (quite possibly not by the owner). To an extent, that's fine; do your culture. But this is presented as the universal for golf as though the game is best when seen through this lens, and that's hella problematic.

I will freely admit that I am in no way the target audience for this book; I do not want heartwarming tales of miraculous last putts on the course where your father played before he died of cancer. I find these saccharine because I am, at heart, deeply unsentimental. Especially in a book about golf, I want the moments when everything went wrong; I want the rained-out games and the broken tees, the missing clubs and the completely botched water hazard. I want the story of getting up and playing again even though everything about the game sucks because you love it too much to walk away, and Chicken Soup doesn't give that. It gives me women who left the game so they could follow their husbands in the cart; it gives me men whose fathers were super obviously broken and stunted but played that one time that mattered and made everything else fine; it gives me adversity in the shape of a weird lay in the rough. (Nope, that's actually not a euphemism.)

This isn't chicken soup; it's toffee, sticky and far too sweet. And it never once acknowledges that golf courses are environmental nightmares. It does want you to pray to Jesus if you're in the running for par on the ninth, though.
2 reviews1 follower
March 5, 2025
A peaceful read filled with lots of funny and heartwarming stories
9 reviews
May 23, 2020
I particularly like the story in which the guys wig os blown off by the wind..
3 reviews
March 6, 2017
Some great stories and as always, just what I needed!
2 reviews
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January 23, 2015
There was one chapter i read over and over because it is true its called every golfers dream and it talks about how every golfer wants to win every tournament he plays but alot of the time that dosent happen but it makes you want to work and get better and try harder on and off the field and it talks about impossable round witch is shooting in 18 but that is a hole in one every hole that is impossable but they make it funny by say if they ever had a perfect round this is how it would go and they say things that would never happen like hitting a house and it going in like that would never happen. i really enjoyed it.
60 reviews21 followers
October 3, 2013
I enjoy all the Chicken Soup books, even those associated with things I'm not personally interested in. I chose this book because my dad was a golfer, so in a way it was in his honor that I read it. One of the best stories was near the end, about a golf-a-thon in Texas. I read it to my daughter as she fed her baby, and we both enjoyed it. If you golf, or know anyone who does, you will appreciate this book, I'm sure.
4 reviews
August 31, 2016
This is a lovely book at the inspirational stories are great
Profile Image for Major Doug.
589 reviews9 followers
August 22, 2014
Listened to this book: liked every short story but the first one; narrators were even good.
Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews

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