Bibliography of fly fishing (species related)

Speckled Brook Trout-Louis Rhead, 1902

This annotated bibliography is intended to list both notable and not so notable works of English language, non-fiction and fiction related to the sport of fly fishing listed by year published. Although 100% of any book listed is not necessarily devoted to fly fishing, all these titles have significant fly fishing content. Included in this bibliography is a list of species related fly fishing literature.

Annotations

Annotations may reflect descriptive comments from the book's dust jacket, third party reviews or personal, descriptive and qualitative comments by individuals who have read the book. Some older works have links to online versions in the Internet Archive or Google Books.

Fly fishing for trout

Many books on the history of fly fishing for trout credit George Pulman for being the first writer to suggest fishing trout flies as dry flies. Pulman builds up to the introduction of the dry fly by writing very vell about the principle of trout-fly imitation, including size, color and form
Sylvester Nemes, 2004[1]
One of the subtlest writers on fishing with fly in any form is G.E.M. Skues, the author of Nymph Fishing. His book Minor Tactics of the Chalk Stream, put an end to the dry-fly purist and brought the angling world back to sanity.
James Robb, Notable Angling Literature (1945)[2]
This is a classic and I often wonder if Skues knew it would be when he set pen to paper. The book is inspirational in a way that Halford's work never was and grips the reader's attention right from the cover, which in the first edition bears the words: ....

The Way of a Trout shows Skues at the height of his powers and it contains the best of his thinking on fishing nymphs and semi-submerged patterns, illustrated by the sort of asides, stories and vast fund of experience that only he could call upon.

Dr. Andrew Herd[8]
A Modern Dry Fly Code was first published in 1950 and it remains a popular work, having been reprinted at least twice. The Code attracted attention right from the start because there was more in it about terrestrials than there was about mayflies and also because the author focused attention on small imitations to an extent that had never been encouraged before. Marinaro was a brave man for doing it and for some time he stood out as a lone voice in the wilderness; he was challenged, for example, for suggesting that size 14 was the largest hook needed for a dry fly imitation (this was in the days before hooks were available in sizes below 20s). In retrospect, Marinaro probably kicked off a fashion for tiny patterns that went just a little too far before it corrected itself, but his basic point was well made.
Dr. Andrew Herd[10]
Bergman's Trout is the largest (451 pages) ever devoted to one fish in American publishing history. Many anglers, obviously feeling that there's nothing you can learn from a book that you can't learn better from a fish, consider their libraries complete once they've bought their copies of Bergman's Trout.
Arnold Gingrich, Joys of Trout, 1973[12]
Mr. Wright's first book, Fishing the Dry Fly as a Living Insect (E. P. Dutton, 1972) raised the hackles of some reviewers and weekend fishermen. The sportswriter Red Smith wondered in The New York Times whether its author could possibly still be alive. Surely, Mr. Smith wrote, he must have been struck dead for blasphemy, for he had the audacity to suggest that the high priest, Frederic Halford, and such sainted subdeacons as Theodore Gordon, George M. L. LaBranche and Edward Ringwood Hewitt had rocks in their heads when it came to floating a tuft of feather and silk over a trout. The Halford gospel, Mr. Smith noted, taught that the fly should be cast upstream and floated down in an absolutely dead drift. Mr. Wright cast down and across and twitched the fly as he did to suggest to the fish that "here is something alive, edible and defenseless." But Mr. Smith tried the Wright method and then accepted, as he wrote, "what Mr. Wright tells us now -- that nothing brings out the essential bully in a trout like a live bug he knows he can whip."
From Leonard Wright's New York Times Obituary in 2001 [16]
Brook's book is often seen as the best companion for Schweibert's [Nymphs]; the latter is lacking in detailed instructions on fishing techniques, and the former [this book] contains a catalog of historically known and modern ways of fishing the imitations
Paul Schullery, American Fly Fishing-A History, 1996.[19]

Fly fishing for salmon, steelhead, and seatrout

Fly fishing for bass

He [Harry] doesn’t have much modern competition in this area [Bass fishing in rivers]. If you want more detail you’ll have to wait for new techniques to be developed
Charles Waterman, 1989.[27]

Fly fishing for panfish

Fly fishing for rough and other species

Stillwater fly fishing

Saltwater fly fishing

Lefty codified the saltwater fly-fishing experience in 1974 with the publication of Fly Fishing in Saltwater. This [book] became a virtual bible for an emerging generation of saltwater anglers. It was--and remains--indispenable reading
Glenn Law, Concise History of Fly Fishing, 1995.[30]

See also

Notes

  1. Nemes, Sylvester. Two centuries of soft-hackled flies-A survey of literature complete with original patterns. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole.
  2. Robb, James (1945). Notable Angling Literature. London: Herbert Jenkins Ltd. p. 169.
  3. Schullery, Paul (1996). American Fly Fishing-A History. Norwalk, CT: The Easton Press. pp. 110, 119–20.
  4. McDonald, John (1972). Quill Gordon. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. p. 44. ISBN 0-394-46989-5.
  5. Law, Glenn, Halford and Skues, This Chalkstream Ain't Big Enough for the Both of Us,
  6. Gingrich, Arnold (1974). The Fishing In Print-A Guided Tour Through Five Centuries of Angling Literature. New York: Winchester Press. pp. 224–241. ISBN 0-87691-157-2.
  7. The Flyfishers Classic Library
  8. Herd, Dr. Andrew Herd, A Fly Fishing History
  9. 1 2 Book and Video Reviews, Fly Anglers Online
  10. Herd, Dr. Andrew Herd, Fly Fishing History
  11. Ferguson, Stephan (1979). "The Gentleman's Recreation: Sporting Books in the Princeton University Library". The Princeton University Library Chronicle. XL (Spring): 270.
  12. Gingrich, Arnold (1973). The Joys of Trout. New York: Crown Publishers, Inc. pp. 89–90. ISBN 0-517-50584-3.
  13. Gingrich, Arnold (1974). The Fishing In Print-A Guided Tour Through Five Centuries of Angling Literature. New York: Winchester Press. p. 315.
  14. Google Book Search
  15. Schullery, Paul (1996). American Fly Fishing-A History. Norwalk, CT: The Easton Press. pp. 223–24.
  16. Saxon, Wolfgang (September 6, 2001). "Leonard Wright Jr., 78, Writer Who Dared to Change Fishing". New York Times. Retrieved 2008-04-11.
  17. Schullery, Paul (1996). American Fly Fishing-A History. Norwalk, CT: The Easton Press. p. 219.
  18. Gingrich, Arnold (1974). The Fishing In Print-A Guided Tour Through Five Centuries of Angling Literature. New York: Winchester Press. pp. 315–16. ISBN 0-87691-157-2.
  19. Schullery, Paul (1996). American Fly Fishing-A History. Norwalk, CT: The Easton Press. p. 218.
  20. Crietz, Bill, Casting Times, Volume 1, Issue 3, Nov-Dec 2006, page 2
  21. Vang, Paul F. Fly Anglers Online Book Reviews
  22. Gingrich, Arnold (1974). The Fishing In Print-A Guided Tour Through Five Centuries of Angling Literature. New York: Winchester Press. pp. 115–149. ISBN 0-87691-157-2.
  23. Gingrich, Arnold (1974). The Fishing In Print-A Guided Tour Through Five Centuries of Angling Literature. New York: Winchester Press. p. 312. ISBN 0-87691-157-2.
  24. Veverka, Bob; Radencich, Michael (2004). Spey Flies and How to Tie Them. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books. p. 32. ISBN 0-8117-0032-1.
  25. Tapply, William G., From Bobs to Bugs-A Little History
  26. Gingrich, Arnold (1974). The Fishing In Print-A Guided Tour Through Five Centuries of Angling Literature. New York: Winchester Press. p. 218. ISBN 0-87691-157-2.
  27. Murray, Harry (1989). Fly Fishing For Smallmouth Bass. New York: Lyons and Burford Publishers. pp. preface. ISBN 0-941130-85-1.
  28. Serviente, Barry (1996). Angler's Art Catalog. Plainfield, PA: The Anglers Art. p. 47.
  29. Schullery, Paul (1996). American Fly Fishing-A History. Norwalk, CT: The Easton Press. p. 221.
  30. Law, Glenn (1995). A Concise History of Fly Fishing. Birmingham, Alabama: Odysseus Editions. p. 132.
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