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Good stuff that life is made of. Arg. I have better things to do. Gierach is guilty of inconsistancy. Its getting old. Honestly though, all great writers are inconsistent, unless you consider Jane Austin. His best stories in this book are when he gets off his usual beaten track (AK Best this., 23 inch trout that.). I discovered him at my local library when I came across a copy of "The View from Rat Lake" and have devoured every book he has written since then.
I have a theory that Gierach is at his best when he is drinking. I have done that with Melville, Hemingway, and a few others. and talks about flowers, dirt roads, or Hemingway. We can all find inspiration in great writers. We all are, I guess. It is a human condition.Onto Fool's Paradise. I hate to say that, but scotch has done so much for Hemingway, Faulkner, Poe, and other celebrated American writers. This book reads better with a shotglass and a beer chaser.
Too much has been written about flyfishing streams you can't say the name of, and then listing the body count. I once drank a warm beer while kneeling next to Papa's grave. I love his story about following Papa in his footsteps in Key West. It was good. Lousy fish porn.
Perhaps his next book should be about politics: Hunting with Sarah Palin, or something like that. And dare I say it; other writers do it better. I think Gierach should move on from his boring fly fishing stories that all start and end the same. I have read every one of Gierach's books. I did a Vulcan mind meld with the cold granite.
Enough already. If you are thrilled by perfection, go read her six novels. I guess I am burned out on Gierach's stories that start like "There is this stream, I can't tell you where." and ends with ".and the last trout, the smallest, was 25 inches long." Thats just fish porn.
If i cant get away to the outdoors for real , he takes me there. I read everything by this author.
I like his philosophical insight as well as his fishing stories. I have spent a lot of time in tents this summer while fishing in Alaska, Colorado, Idaho, and Wyoming. It surely beats counting sheep. I think I've read everything Gierach has written, some of it twice in the same manner. I take a lantern and Fool's Paradise with me when I turn in. As always, Gierach is great reading, and a chapter a night lets me unwind and get ready for sleep.
If you are not an avid fly fisher person you may find them boring. As with John's other books this a group of short stories about his fishing trips and friends. I enjoy his books and they keep me entertained until I can get out on a stream.
He really connects with the common experiences of those who enjoy fly fishing and all of its baffling dimensions. John Gierach can be depended upon to be knowledgeable and entertaining.
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