Amazon.com Review
Prosek has commandeered a unique branch for himself in the long stream of fishing literature. With
Trout: An Illustrated History and
Joe and Me, he's reeled in the reputation of a modern-day
Audubon with a keen eye that translates experience into both words and watercolors. In
The Complete Angler, he sets out to tackle the legacy of Isaak Walton, the granddaddy of littoral lit and his 17th-century classic,
The Compleat Angler. While still an undergraduate, Prosek convinces the solons at Yale to fund a traveling fellowship for him to fish the waters Walton fished, to ponder their joint obsession with angling, and the fellowship and philosophies inherent in sitting on banks with a rod in your hand. "Fishing is my religion and the trout stream is my temple," Prosek declares proudly, which makes Walton at least a High Priest, if not the Messiah.
You certainly can't accuse Prosek of shrinking from a challenge. Walton's Compleat Angler is one of the towers of English literature. Not only the third most reprinted volume in the language (after the Bible and Shakespeare), it is the rare book that has spanned several centuries of readership without ever going out of print. Stepping into Walton's waders--literary and sporting--and fishing his way through public and private waters throughout Britain, Prosek attempts to navigate deeper, trickier currents than he's previously attempted. What he catches is part homage, part pilgrimage, part meditation, and entirely alluring--a work that balances youthful exuberance with insight and depth. Walton's considerable shadow challenges and encourages Prosek's growth as writer and artist; both his writing and the painting that illustrates this handsome effort are maturing. "I didn't exactly know what I would find," Prosek admits at the start. It's precisely this attitude that makes his journey, and the surprises he snares, all the more enchanting. --Jeff Silverman
From Publishers Weekly
Prosek (Trout) recounts the adventures he had while fulfilling both his love of fly-fishing and the requirements of his senior college thesis. Traveling on a grant, he roved the English countryside, visiting significant landmarks and streams in the life of Izaak Walton, the 17th-century angler and writer who penned The Compleat Angler, the book considered by many to be the definitive work on the sport. Prosek envisions his own work as "a popular, not entirely scholarly piece, with hopes that Walton's works may enjoy more readers." Indeed, there is much careful research into Walton's life. Prosek is particularly interested in the idea that Walton came to think of angling as his religion, much as Prosek does himself, but he realizes that while biography reveals almost as much about the writer as it does about the subject, such a neat comparison could well be romantic and wishful thinking. Prosek points out that Walton, an adherent of the Church of England, wrote his own book after fleeing London during the English Civil War, and one Walton scholar makes a case that Walton's book was really a coded polemic whose proper title was The Compleat Anglican. In any event, Prosek's take could aptly be named The Compleat Anglophile (which Prosek admits to being), and at times the proper tone and borrowed British idioms are pretentious. The book's charm, however, lies in its quiet realism, both in Prosek's honest reflections and in his vivid paintings, which accompany the text. 18 full-color plates. Author tour.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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