In the UK’s Literary Review, Jonathan Mirsky calls Forbidden Game ‘vivid’ and ‘revealing’

Jonathan Mirsky writes:

There are two books here. One is about the intricacies and arcana of golf — irons, niblicks, drivers, pars, cuts, and so on. If you are a golf maven, go for it. But the other book is on a wholly different matter: the details and extent of local and high-level Chinese corruption — ‘A China thing’, or ‘That’s China’, as one of Dan Washburn’s main subjects repeats, as if to excuse as well as explain. I know no narrative that surpasses The Forbidden Game in this regard.

Building golf courses has been illegal for many years in China, except for a very recent ruling that permits them on Hainan island alone. But hundreds have been built, saving the bacon of the world’s leading designers as the American market has collapsed. If there is a better example of ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’, as these vast unmistakable tracts spread across the country, I haven’t noticed it. …

The accounts of villagers, promised compensation for the expropriation of their land, which in China ultimately belongs to the government, and subsequently betrayed, are vivid. …

This Literary Review article is not available online, but a digital edition is available for purchase.