A global fishing trip that hooks more than fish.
There is life, and then there is fly-fishing. Coggins believes that the second of these can provide crucial insights into the first, through the patience required, the unique mixture of simplicity and complexity, the connection to the natural environment, the lessons of failure, and the thrill of success. He covered some of this ground in his 2014 book The Optimist, but this book is more personal and candid and less technical. At the age of 45, which he thought would be the middle of his life, the author embarked on a yearlong tour that included Patagonia, Scotland, Spain, Norway, Belize, and even Cuba, as well as various parts of the U.S. As Coggins recounts, sometimes he landed a good catch, and sometimes he went home empty-handed. Nonetheless, his excursions were always journeys of self-discovery, and Coggins found the space and time to ask and answer crucial questions about his life and his connections to others. Along the way, he met an assortment of interesting people, an eccentric brotherhood bound by a love of the cast, and developed hard-won wisdom, for which “there’s no short-cut, no self-help book, no retreat, no guru, no mountaintop, no fad diet, no hack, no money-back guarantee.” Coggins eventually decided that he would remain an enthusiastic amateur, an occasional caster of the lure. That, he notes, is enough for him, perhaps more than enough. He concludes: "I think I’ve arrived at a better balance, based on something I already knew: you can survive very well with less fishing, or anything else for that matter. You’ll be alright.” That, indeed, is the thought to take away from this meditative, enjoyable book.
An engaging personal journey about finding what you need to find and keeping it in your heart.