βAfter five decades, twenty books, and countless columns, [John Gierach] is still a master,β (Forbes) and his newest book only confirms this assessment, along with his recent induction into the Flyfishing Hall of Fame. In A Fly Rod of Your Own, Gierach brings his ever-sharp sense of humor and keen eye for observation to the fishing life and, for that matter, life in general.
Known for his witty, trenchant observations about fly-fishing, Gierachβs βdeceptively laconic prose masks an accomplished storytellerβ¦his alert and slightly off-kilter observations place him in the general neighborhood of Mark Twain and James Thurberβ (Publishers Weekly). A Fly Rod of Your Own transports readers to streams and rivers from Maine to Montana, and as always, Gierachβs fishing trips become the inspiration for his pointed observations on everything from the psychology of fishing (βFishing is still an oddly passive-aggressive business that depends on the prey being the aggressorβ); why even the most veteran fisherman will muff his cast whenever heβs being filmed or photographed; the inevitable accumulation of more gear than one could ever need (βNature abhors an empty pocket. So does the tackle industryβ); or the qualities shared by the best guides (βthe generosity of a teacher, the craftiness of a psychiatrist, and the enthusiasm of a cheerleader with a kind of Vulcan detachmentβ).
As Gierach likes to say, βfly-fishing is a continuous process that you learn to love for its own sake. Those who fish already get it, and those who donβt couldnβt care less, so donβt waste your breath on someone who doesnβt fish.β A Fly Rod of Your Own is an ode to those who fish that βbrings a skeptical, wry voice to the peril and promise of twenty-first-century fishingβ (Booklist).