Remarkable golf courses include the extremes of the sport – from the highest golf course in La Paz, Bolivia to the lowest, in Death Valley, US; From the northernmost in the polar circle to the southernmost in Tierra del Fuego.
Published for the first time in 2017, but updated with new submissions for 2025, remarkable golf courses, written by Sportswriter Iain Spragg, brings some amazing stories together with some extraordinary photography.
The many peculiarities of the golf world are covered with the 224 pages, such as the 18th Green on the other side of the River Lea that is maintained by an electric ferry in the Brocket Hall, or the golf course in Los Angeles who has his own Funicular Railway, or the floating Green in Idaho, where it is not just the Pinore.

Golf courses with neolithic stones (Scotland), Roman roads (England) and ruined medieval castles (Wales) occupy their place next to the old temples of Delhi or a UNESCO World Heritage Bridge that is used to connect the 9th and 10th in Angkor what.
There are the beloved classic courses by St. Andrews, Carnoustie, Royal St Georges and Westward Ho!. Spectacular golf courses have been carved from the desert of Nevada and Arizona, green oases in a cactus strewn, rocky landscape, bordered by Dorre Black Lava streams together with Hawaiian jobs. But nothing can beat the sensation in Guatemala to list your drive on an active volcano on the Fuego Maya course.

In comparison, there are the traditional scottish left blown by the wind, such as the Machrie on the island of Islay, which has the most blind greens on every track, or the remote island of Barra where Greens are only accessible via a pillow gate. Do you want to exchange countries halfway? You can go to the Llanmymynech club in Wales. Counting in Wales and the Green in England is exhausted at the fourth hole golfers.
Remarkable golf courses will be published on October 23 and can be ordered from HarperCollins.com.
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