Tiger, Tiger

James Patterson, 1947-

Book - 2024

"On April 13, 1986, ten-year-old Tiger Woods watches his idol, Jack Nicklaus, win his record sixth Masters. Just over a decade later, chants of "Ti-ger, Ti-ger!" ring out as the twenty-one-year-old wins his first Green Jacket. He blazes an incredible path, winning fourteen major titles (second only to Nicklaus himself) by the time he's thirty-three, smashing records and raising standards. Then come multiple public scandals and potentially career-ending injuries. The once-assured champion becomes an all-American underdog. "YouTube golfer" is how his two children know their father--winless since 2013--until he wins the 2019 Masters, his fifteenth major, before their eyes. But the story doesn't end there. Tig...er, Tiger is the first full-scale Woods biography of the decade. In James Patterson's hands, this story is a hole-in-one thriller"-- Dust jacket.

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2nd Floor EXPRESS shelf 796.352092/Woods Due Nov 14, 2024
2nd Floor New Shelf 796.352092/Woods (NEW SHELF) Due Nov 29, 2024
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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York : Little, Brown and Company 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
James Patterson, 1947- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
v, 441 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780316438605
  • Prologue: Father and son
  • Prodigy
  • Amateur
  • Professional
  • Superstar
  • Family man
  • Comeback
  • Epilogue: 100 rounds
  • Notes.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Bestseller Patterson (The 24th Hour) delivers a strangely detached biography of Tiger Woods, based entirely on previously published remarks from family, competitors, and others in the athlete's orbit. Woods's early years are recreated through recollections from his father, Earl, who remembers modeling proper putting technique while an infant Woods looked on from his highchair. Such memories bring a sense of intimacy to the early chapters, but Patterson's overreliance on the perspectives of those who weren't as close with Woods creates an odd sense of remove as the book wears on. For instance, the play-by-play of Woods's performance at the 1997 Masters, where he became at age 21 the youngest golfer to ever win the tournament, weaves together the recollections of CBS announcer Jim Nantz and competitors Paul Azinger and Nick Faldo but includes virtually none from Woods himself. Accounts of Woods's scandals, including 2009 revelations about his infidelity and his 2017 arrest for drunk driving, read more like recaps of contemporaneous media coverage than descriptions of the events themselves. This pales in comparison with Jeff Benedict's Tiger Woods. (July)

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