"Recreation." . . "TRAVEL Special Interest Sports." . . "SPORTS & RECREATION Essays." . . "Criminals Biography." . . "GAMES Gambling Sports." . . "Golfers." . . "SPORTS & RECREATION Business Aspects." . . "SPORTS & RECREATION Golf." . . . . . . "A saga of 1930s Hollywood profiles camera-shy golf legend John Montague, who mingled with Hollywood royalty and earned a reputation as a great golfer until his true identity was revealed as a fugitive wanted for armed robbery." . . . . . "Biography" . "Biography"@en . . . . . . . "A saga of 1930s Hollywood profiles camera-shy golf legend John Montague, who mingled with Hollywood royalty and earned a reputation a a great golfer until his true identity was revealed as a fugitive wanted for armed robbery."@en . . . . . "The mysterious Montague : a true tale of Hollywood, golf, and armed robbery"@en . "The mysterious Montague : a true tale of Hollywood, golf, and armed robbery" . . "John Montague was a boisterous enigma. He had a bagful of golf tricks, on and off the course. He could knock a bird off a wire from 170 yards, and when the big man arrived in Hollywood in the early 1930s, he quickly became a celebrity among celebrities. He played golf with everyone from Howard Hughes to Babe Ruth and his close friend Bing Crosby, whom he famously beat with only a rake, a shovel, and a bat. Yet strangely Montague never entered a professional tournament, and he never allowed his image to be captured on film. When a photographer snapped his picture with a telephoto lens, police in upstate New York recognized him as a fugitive wanted for armed robbery. As Montague was indicted, hordes of national media descended and turned a star-studded legal carnival into the most talked about trial of its day.--From publisher description."@en . "John Montague was a boisterous enigma. He had a bagful of golf tricks, on and off the course. He could knock a bird off a wire from 170 yards, and when the big man arrived in Hollywood in the early 1930s, he quickly became a celebrity among celebrities. He played golf with everyone from Howard Hughes to Babe Ruth and his close friend Bing Crosby, whom he famously beat with only a rake, a shovel, and a bat. Yet strangely Montague never entered a professional tournament, and he never allowed his image to be captured on film. When a photographer snapped his picture with a telephoto lens, police in upstate New York recognized him as a fugitive wanted for armed robbery. As Montague was indicted, hordes of national media descended and turned a star-studded legal carnival into the most talked about trial of its day.--From publisher description." . . . . . . . . . "Electronic books"@en . . . . . "Large type books" . "The mysterious Montague a true tale of Hollywood, golf, and armed robbery"@en . "SPORTS & RECREATION Reference." . . "Criminals." . . "SPORTS & RECREATION History." . .