This powerful story of one angler's adventures in the Great Smoky
Mountains is a descent into wildness, a meditation on the landscape
bathed in greenness and truth, and the discovery of a people living --
on the spine of time.
From the solace of mountain streams to the frenetic bustle of
Gatlinburg, one of Tennessee's great tourist towns, this memorable
journey summons readers to confront the joys and sorrows of life through
a new understanding of our place in nature and its process.
Harry Middleton had to endure hardships to find the queen mother of all
trout streams in the heart of the Great Smoky Mountains of Tennessee. He
had to live through treacherous mountain roads, the cloud of airborne
industrial toxins that shrouds the range for most of the year, an
occasional blast of lightning, and, worst of all, a helping of rancid
potato salad at a roadside diner. Like Norman MacLean in "A River Runs
Through It," Middleton makes fly-fishing a religion with its own vision
of nirvana, and if it takes an occasional descent into the nether
regions to attain it, the author isn't afraid to supply the grisly
details. This graceful, funny memoir belongs in every angler's library.