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Inventing Montana: Dispatches from the Madison Valley

Inventing Montana: Dispatches from the Madison ValleyAuthor: Ted Leeson
Publisher: Skyhorse Publishing
Category: Book

List Price: $24.95
Buy New: $12.97
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Seller: buckscountybooks2893
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
Sales Rank: 409929

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1ST
Pages: 256
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2
Dimensions (in): 9 x 6.1 x 0.6

ISBN: 1602397961
Dewey Decimal Number: 978.6
EAN: 9781602397965
ASIN: 1602397961

Publication Date: September 1, 2009
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  • ISBN13: 9781602397965
  • Condition: New
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  • Kindle Edition - Inventing Montana: Dispatches from the Madison Valley

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
“Ted Leeson is taking us in the only direction the literature of angling should go: toward finding our place in the natural world. His voice is indispensable.”—Thomas McGuane Every summer for two decades, Ted Leeson and a maverick group of close companions have returned to an old ranch house on the benchland overlooking the Madison River. Trout and fly fishing may be at the heart of their ritual return, but their experience goes far beyond the fishing. Leeson contemplates both the human and natural landscape brilliantly: the fly-anglers’ passionate, ironic, and sometimes hilarious allegiances to what they do; the intriguing Madison Valley and its creatures and flowers; the trout town of Ennis; maps and their revelations; the “green-card” experience of living in a place in which you are not native; the nature of leisure.

Full of wit, surprise, shrewd observation, and wisdom, this book tells a story about creating a place of temporary liberty, and inhabiting a world fashioned of your best imaginings, where you might, for a time, live the potencies of a place that you have shaped and has shaped you. No lover of the very best writing about fly fishing and the natural world can afford to miss this stunning book. .



Customer Reviews:
5 out of 5 stars Enlightening, Funny, Super-smart   September 7, 2009
aFISHionado (Redding, CA)
6 out of 7 found this review helpful

Inventing Montana solidifies Ted Leeson's position as fly fishing's chief philosopher. Here Leeson tackles how and why Montana has become our sport's Valhalla, while at the same time painting a vivid picture of the area's geographic, geological, and cultural features. Leeson keeps us grounded in visceral descriptions of fishing, fishing friends, and fishing camp, descriptions that put me right there with him. And as someone who has never fished Montana, I still found it totally engaging--it's about fly fishing and fly fisherman more than anything else. This is definitely Leeson's funniest book...I laughed out-loud many times. Sure to be read for as long as people fish flies.


5 out of 5 stars A Must for mature fly fishers   March 3, 2010
M. Albrecht (Bozeman, MT)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Great book - not even close to being just about fishing. NOT a how to. Great thoughts and writing about life and fishing and Montana. I could only read it in small pieces - due to it's thought provoking nature. Like a fine single malt it is meant to be savored and could be an acquired taste.


5 out of 5 stars Top-Shelf Sporting Literature   September 30, 2009
Fishing Writing (SE)
3 out of 4 found this review helpful

With The Habits of Rivers and Jerusalem Creek to his credit, Ted Leeson now assumes the top of the heap of sporting writing with his latest work. I would rank his work up there with McGuane, Traver, Lyons, Barich and Haig-Brown in terms of depth and sophistication of writing. 5 stars.


5 out of 5 stars GREAT BOOK   November 27, 2009
M. R. McClellan (Dandridge, TN)
Ted Leeson writes with descriptive phrases that at times you feel like you are in Montana. Other times you are longing to be there as a part of the group. I highly recommend this book. It is one of his best. Also a must read is Jerusalem Creek - Fly Fishing through Driftless Country.


2 out of 5 stars Serious Fishermen--Look Elsewhere   October 22, 2009
the Great One
4 out of 5 found this review helpful

This was my first read of Ted Leeson- since I've visited the Madison valley each year for the past ten years to fly fish the Madison and spend time in that beautiful country- I couldnt wait to get my hands on this book. A book about a month long fishing trip to the Madison? If you fly fish for trout, and love Western rivers, it doesnt get any better.

Either I had the wrong expectations or Leeson is misrepresented here. I was expecting something along the lines of Gierach or Lyons- where the rivers, the trout, and the fishing are the constant theme, and everything else is woven into the context of the story. I was looking to feel like I was on the trip with him.

Unfortunately, you feel less like you are on a fishing trip, and more like you are trapped at a dinner party listening to a long-winded uncle painfully recount the tales of his month-long trip. Leeson's wordy dissertations on things like cooking, the town of Ennis, the ranch where they stay, and other subjects left me wondering when he was going to get back on track- all those subjects are noteworthy to the story, no doubt- but as Leeson went on and on, I couldn't help but wondering, when are we going to get back to the Madison?

The book does get a little better as it goes along- the last half of the book is more dedicated to the fishing and relates these asides to it, but I was still disappointed. Leeson leaves you wanting more about how the fishing was-also, he doesnt disclose his companions names- he calls them the Writer, the Mechanic, the Bodhi, etc.. It's hard to develop an attachment to these people if you don't even know their names.

If you are a serious fly fishing enthusiast who is looking for something to make you feel like you've been fishing, this won't do it. Maybe I've been spoiled by John Gierach, but that man writes a story about fishing a river in a way that makes you feel like you're right there casting with him. In this case, I've been to the very places Leeson is writing about, but it still made me feel- are we fishing here, or am I listening to you musing about whatever subject came to mind?