Road Fishing

Tales from Fly Fishing’s Coyote Nowhere

Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book Road Fishing by John Holt, Absolutely Amazing Ebooks
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: John Holt ISBN: 1230002319421
Publisher: Absolutely Amazing Ebooks Publication: May 13, 2018
Imprint: The New Atlantian Library Language: English
Author: John Holt
ISBN: 1230002319421
Publisher: Absolutely Amazing Ebooks
Publication: May 13, 2018
Imprint: The New Atlantian Library
Language: English

John Holt tells us, “It’s now been more than fifty years that I’ve been fishing, and roaming and loving Montana and the rest of the northern high plains. Lines on maps don’t mean a damn thing to good country or to me. Montana flows into Alberta and British Columbia and Wyoming. The western Dakotas are the same place as Eastern Montana only with different names. Land is connected, not defined by human limitations. I first thought of writing and compiling this book while working a stream that wound through a brushy, tall-grass valley at the base of the Pryor Mountains last summer. Wild rainbows fought for the chance to engulf the Elk Hair caddis I was using. Beautiful healthy, small, colorful fish. Early afternoon was now sunset, the hours passing in an instant. And this made me remember the first trip to Montana in the sixties and the intervening hundreds of thousands (come to think of it. maybe more than a million) of miles I’ve wandered checking good, bad and indifferent water hanging out in serene isolation all over the place during the past half century. That time also passing in an instant that also at times seemed eternal.” Edward Squires (Not Quite Novellas) calls it, “The best book about fly fishing since A River Runs Through It. Makes me dream of rainbow trout and cold streams and remote wilderness landscapes …”

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

John Holt tells us, “It’s now been more than fifty years that I’ve been fishing, and roaming and loving Montana and the rest of the northern high plains. Lines on maps don’t mean a damn thing to good country or to me. Montana flows into Alberta and British Columbia and Wyoming. The western Dakotas are the same place as Eastern Montana only with different names. Land is connected, not defined by human limitations. I first thought of writing and compiling this book while working a stream that wound through a brushy, tall-grass valley at the base of the Pryor Mountains last summer. Wild rainbows fought for the chance to engulf the Elk Hair caddis I was using. Beautiful healthy, small, colorful fish. Early afternoon was now sunset, the hours passing in an instant. And this made me remember the first trip to Montana in the sixties and the intervening hundreds of thousands (come to think of it. maybe more than a million) of miles I’ve wandered checking good, bad and indifferent water hanging out in serene isolation all over the place during the past half century. That time also passing in an instant that also at times seemed eternal.” Edward Squires (Not Quite Novellas) calls it, “The best book about fly fishing since A River Runs Through It. Makes me dream of rainbow trout and cold streams and remote wilderness landscapes …”

More books from Absolutely Amazing Ebooks

Cover of the book The Poet’s Compendium by John Holt
Cover of the book Here We Go Again, Boys by John Holt
Cover of the book 50 Shades of Getting Laid by John Holt
Cover of the book Heaven's Judge by John Holt
Cover of the book Overlooking the Obvious by John Holt
Cover of the book Marlow: Banana Wind by John Holt
Cover of the book Great Garlic! by John Holt
Cover of the book Bone Island Maggie by John Holt
Cover of the book The Homerun Kid by John Holt
Cover of the book Needled by John Holt
Cover of the book Bad Elements by John Holt
Cover of the book Greatest Hits of ... The 2000's by John Holt
Cover of the book Death Rattle by John Holt
Cover of the book Onederland by John Holt
Cover of the book "Tis the Season by John Holt
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy