PRAISE FOR PHIL: "Thoroughly engaging."
--Gene Wang, The Washington Post "A terrific read . . . Shipnuck takes you inside the rooms where decisions were made. . . . His reporting is exhaustive, his attention to detail fresh and unfrivolous, but what makes this publication so appealing is its pace. It sticks and moves like a young Cassius Clay, covering the angles without getting ponderous or cumbersome."
--John Hawkins, Sports Illustrated
"Alan Shipnuck's latest book, LIV and Let Die, may be his best book yet--which is saying something. . . . This book, which provides a history lesson on the last fifty-plus years of the professional game, will be enjoyed by casual and non-golf fans alike but there's so much new reporting and colorful, fresh anecdotes for even the most ardent golf fan and industry lifers. . . . A page-turner."
--Golfweek
"There are good writers who can't report and terrific reporters who can't write, but Alan Shipnuck is a master of both the art and science of sports journalism. A workhorse who doubles as a wordsmith in a medium compromised by so many factors in recent years, Shipnuck's ninth book, LIV and Let Die, is a comprehensive chronicle of the most scurrilous conflict in golf history--a slugfest full of blood, sweat and fears since it invaded public consciousness in the spring of 2022."
--Sports Illustrated
"Shipnuck cuts to the intrigue of an acrimonious story that still twists and turns with snake-like flexibility. . . . You can be sure that the leading figures on all sides will be keen to see what is in his book." --The Times (UK)
"It's a terrific history, and even if you think you know everything about the LIV Golf melodrama--indeed, even if you've been immersed in it far too long--you'll learn something. . . . I flew through it in one long train ride. . . . The book is gossipy as hell, and the gossip is fun, and it's absolutely going to be one of those texts that people use to rail against as the Fall of Journalism while they secretly consume it in greedy chunks. Shipnuck, for all his storytelling ability--hell, as part of his storytelling ability--knows how to dish out the sugar. . . . The writing is classic Shipnuck--quippy, sometimes funny and always most concerned with pushing the story forward. The pace is brisk; he will never bore you."
--Shane Ryan, Golf Digest
"Sensational . . . Shipnuck has artfully and entertainingly pieced together the story of LIV's emergence. . . . The fresh reporting in LIV and Let Die is infused with Shipnuck interpretations to make for a fantastic read. Don't be fooled by some of the early narratives as a purely salacious read. The book could easily become the basis for a sports business class and a textbook on how not to handle a disruptive threat."
--Geoff Shackelford, The Quadrilateral
"It's a compelling read, littered with so much profanity that it sometimes reads more like a screenplay for a Quentin Tarantino movie than a book about a traditionally genteel sport."
--Don Riddell, CNN Sport
"It's one thing getting into limited-access places most can't, being party to sensitive conversations most aren't, and having the ear of influential people most don't, but setting the knowledge earned to paper in a coherent and absorbing way is quite another. Shipnuck manages to do it all brilliantly here. . . . This is one book every golfer should read. Revealing and readable, it is also important and likely to be listed among the very best golf books of the decade, if not the last generation."
--Links Magazine
"Over 30 years, Shipnuck, first at Sports Illustrated and now at his own independent website, has become the top chronicler of professional golf. The genteel golf landscape has long bristled at his fearless, detailed reporting and irreverent tone. But his pre-eminence ultimately convinces the sport's big and little figures to engage with him, if reluctantly. . . . LIV and Let Die pierces the game's carefully curated image of decorum, exposing its greed, cynicism, and hypocrisy."
--Financial Times