As a lover of Jones's non-fiction works (Powers & Thrones is sublime), I really wanted to like his first taste of fiction, but this book just comes up flat. Conceptually, I am taken by the illustration of the quick historical war narratives, and to his credit, Jones knows his history - the story feels authentic to the historical setting and allows the reader to join in the campaign to some degree
But ultimately, it falls short of being truly engaging fiction. Characters are flat, stereotypical, and above all uninteresting. Scenic descriptions are underwhelming and don't capture the feeling of being in France. I hear that the second book improves on these areas, and I may get to it at some point.
As a lover of Jones's non-fiction works (Powers & Thrones is sublime), I really wanted to like his first taste of fiction, but this book just comes up flat. Conceptually, I am taken by the illustration of the quick historical war narratives, and to his credit, Jones knows his history - the story feels authentic to the historical setting and allows the reader to join in the campaign to some degree
But ultimately, it falls short of being truly engaging fiction. Characters are flat, stereotypical, and above all uninteresting. Scenic descriptions are underwhelming and don't capture the feeling of being in France. I hear that the second book improves on these areas, and I may get to it at some point.
A helpful read with ideas around clear-minded confidence that apply on and off the course. Perhaps a few too many anecdotes which start too feel all-too-familiar by the last chapters (guy was bad at putting, but then he tried this, and he's good now). Definitely recommend to any golfer.
A helpful read with ideas around clear-minded confidence that apply on and off the course. Perhaps a few too many anecdotes which start too feel all-too-familiar by the last chapters (guy was bad at putting, but then he tried this, and he's good now). Definitely recommend to any golfer.