9781737983026-1737983028-Bless.ed One: From a shantytown in Kabwé, Zambia, to the first Black African in the U.S. Open

Bless.ed One: From a shantytown in Kabwé, Zambia, to the first Black African in the U.S. Open

ISBN-13: 9781737983026
ISBN-10: 1737983028
Author: James Roth
Publication date: 2021
Publisher: This Moment Publications
Format: Hardcover 420 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9781737983026
ISBN-10: 1737983028
Author: James Roth
Publication date: 2021
Publisher: This Moment Publications
Format: Hardcover 420 pages

Summary

Bless.ed One: From a shantytown in Kabwé, Zambia, to the first Black African in the U.S. Open (ISBN-13: 9781737983026 and ISBN-10: 1737983028), written by authors James Roth, was published by This Moment Publications in 2021. With an overall rating of 3.9 stars, it's a notable title among other Africa (Historical, African History, Golf, Biographies, Golf, Individual Sports) books. You can easily purchase or rent Bless.ed One: From a shantytown in Kabwé, Zambia, to the first Black African in the U.S. Open (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Africa books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.97.

Description

One shot.
Centuries of false truths upended. An entire sport redefined. Madalitso Muthiya did both at the U.S. Open in New York on June 5, 2006, armed only with a glistening driver, inexplicable talent, and stern but loving tutelage from his father. His warm smile and casual demeanor cloaked a hardened determination that came from a life surrounded by disease and extreme poverty and enduring the awkward stares and quiet whispers that made him an outsider.
To everyone here, "Mad" was new. A fresh face. An unexpected splash of uniqueness that sent fans scrambling for information. But their tournament programs didn't reveal the origin of his story. It certainly wasn't a stately golf course in New York under the warm morning sky, rubbing elbows with the well-heeled. The elite. It began decades earlier, oceans and continents away, in a land defined by one peoples' crimes against another. Racism, forced labor, cultures destroyed, families torn apart.
History was often his fuel. At other times, a lead weight chained to his golf bag. A burden he carried everywhere, to every tournament until his father's voice exhorted him to let it go. 'Just focus on what you need to do.'
At 9:01 AM on June 5 his ball and tee were firmly planted. The fairway beckoned in front of him. The heavens shined down. A single display of his God-given swing would change golf. Forever.
One shot.

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