Home :: Books :: Sports  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports

Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
A Wedding Gift: And Other Angling Stories

A Wedding Gift: And Other Angling Stories

List Price: $18.95
Your Price: $18.95
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent reading by the fireplace.
Review: I received the original printing of this book by my father who purchased it in Europe. My mother found the follow-up book at an auction some twenty years later. This was a dream come true. I am currently looking for the 3rd book (original printing) of Mr. George Potter and his lovely wife and everlasting antique shopper, Isabelle. It helps if you are a fisherman but, you don't necessarily have to be to fall in love with these books. Author, John Foote , puts into words the true feeling of a perfectionist, this one just happens to be a fly fisherman. Every ounce of blood from the character, George Potter, is put forth through his vision of what fly fishing is all about and why everyone should feel the way he does about it. An outstanding series of stories by a writer I know very little about. I plan on purchasing all of Mr. Foote's books once I find them.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Preston Sturges-like
Review: John Taintor Foote, one assumes he is somehow related to Shelby & Horton, was a playwright and screenwriter of the 30's (his credits include the great film The Mark of Zorro). In addition, he penned several of the best fishing stories ever written in the continuing misadventures of George Baldwin Potter, collected here with introductions by Foote's son, Timothy.

Potter, a fly fishing pedant, is a bachelor in his forties when the series opens, but he has decided to take a young bride. The first story, the eponymous Wedding Gift, finds him pouring out his soul to our narrator. Seems that George's new bride, Isabelle, was not terribly impressed with the honeymoon that he so carefully planned, a one week trek into the wilds of Maine to fly fish. As George's tale wends it's convoluted way to it's conclusion, it builds towards an awful, but truly hilarious, climax which leaves the newlyweds' marriage in a shambles. In the next story, the marriage has again foundered on the rocks after George, dispatched to an auction to purchase a coveted antique, instead finds himself mesmerized by a fly rod collection. And in the final tale, Isabelle gets her revenge by using a brilliant but devious ploy to trick George into buying her a farm in Connecticut.

The stories are a delightful screwball combination of fishing and battle-of-the-sexes comedy, sort of Isaak Walton rewritten by Preston Sturges. I can't recommend them highly enough.

GRADE: A

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Preston Sturges-like
Review: John Taintor Foote, one assumes he is somehow related to Shelby & Horton, was a playwright and screenwriter of the 30's (his credits include the great film The Mark of Zorro). In addition, he penned several of the best fishing stories ever written in the continuing misadventures of George Baldwin Potter, collected here with introductions by Foote's son, Timothy.

Potter, a fly fishing pedant, is a bachelor in his forties when the series opens, but he has decided to take a young bride. The first story, the eponymous Wedding Gift, finds him pouring out his soul to our narrator. Seems that George's new bride, Isabelle, was not terribly impressed with the honeymoon that he so carefully planned, a one week trek into the wilds of Maine to fly fish. As George's tale wends it's convoluted way to it's conclusion, it builds towards an awful, but truly hilarious, climax which leaves the newlyweds' marriage in a shambles. In the next story, the marriage has again foundered on the rocks after George, dispatched to an auction to purchase a coveted antique, instead finds himself mesmerized by a fly rod collection. And in the final tale, Isabelle gets her revenge by using a brilliant but devious ploy to trick George into buying her a farm in Connecticut.

The stories are a delightful screwball combination of fishing and battle-of-the-sexes comedy, sort of Isaak Walton rewritten by Preston Sturges. I can't recommend them highly enough.

GRADE: A


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates