Casting for Recovery – Spring Auction 2012
Auction Ends: May 4, 2012 10:00 PM EDT

Books

Autographed Copy of "The Rise" by Paul Schullery

Item Number
178
Estimated Value
27 USD
Sold
25 USD to TexasFlyBoy979
Number of Bids
3  -  Bid History

Item Description

Autographed by author Paul Schullery and illustrator Marsha Karle.

This book distills five centuries' worth of angling lore and wisdom about trout feeding behavior.

  • Photographic sequence shows in detail how trout take a fly
  • Examination of flies includes the importance of wings and what they are made of, hooks, soft-hackled flies, and skipping, dapping, and dry-fly techniques.

Even after centuries of observation, anglers are still trying to solve the mysteries of that magical instant when a trout takes a fly. The Rise, based on recent scientific research into trout-feeding behavior and the author's extraordinary photographic studies, provides many new clues.

With unprecedented photographic clarity, Schullery reveals the subtleties of the trout's feeding behavior, analyzes the rise forms that puzzle us, and offers startling and reassuring insights into the lessons of rejection. Schullery challenges modern "common knowledge"; reconsiders neglected flies, ideas, and tactics; and faces some of fly fishing's toughest questions with wit, patience, and the happy conviction that the questions are more important than the answers anyway.

Item Special Note

At various times since 1972, Paul worked for the National Park Service in Yellowstone as a ranger-naturalist, historian-archivist, environmental protection specialist, senior editor in the Yellowstone Center for Resources, and chief of cultural resources.  He retired from the National Park Service in 2008, but continues to write, publish, and speak on a variety of topics. He is the author, co-author, or editor of 45 books about nature, conservation, and outdoor sport, including The Bears of Yellowstone; Mountain Time; Searching for Yellowstone: Ecology and Wonder in the Last Wilderness; America's National Parks: The Spectacular Forces that Shaped Our Treasured Lands; Real Alaska: Finding Our Way in the Wild Country; and Lewis and Clark Among the Grizzlies: Legend and Legacy in the American West. He has written for many publications, ranging from the Encyclopedia Britannica Yearbook of Science and the Future and BioScience to The New York Times and Outdoor Life. Paul is the recipient of an honorary doctorate from Montana State University (1997), the Wallace Stegner Award from the University of Colorado Center for the American West (given for "a sustained contribution to the cultural identity of the American West,"1998), and a Panda Award from Wildscreen International (2002) for his script for the ABC/PBS film "Yellowstone:  America's Sacred Wilderness," which he wrote and narrated. 

Paul served as an advisor and interviewee for the Ken Burns film "The National Parks" (2009). He has been honored by the U.S. Interagency Grizzly Bear Committee for his work in grizzly bear conservation, and in 2011 he was honored by the George Wright Society for his "outstanding contributions to conservation history, national park policy, and the understanding of wildlife, which have significantly advanced science-based resource management" in the national parks. He has served on a variety of advisory boards and groups, and is currently scholar-in-residence at the Montana State University Library.

In the field of fly fishing, Paul was executive director of The American Museum of Fly Fishing, in Manchester, Vermont, from 1977 to 1982, and editor of The American Fly Fisher, the museum's journal, from 1978 to 1983.  At various times he has been a columnist for Trout, Sporting Classics, and American Angler magazines.  He has dealt with many of the central topics of fly fishing in a series of books of history, essays, memoir, and fiction, including American Fly Fishing: A History (1987); Royal Coachman (1999); The Rise: Streamside Observations on Trout, Flies, and Fly Fishing (2006); If Fish Could Scream: An Angler's Search for the Future of Fly Fishing (2008); Fly-Fishing Secrets of the Ancients: A Celebration of Five Centuries of Lore and Wisdom (2009), and the forthcoming The Fishing Life (2012).  For his work as a writer on angling lore and history, the Federation of Fly Fishers presented him with the Roderick Haig-Brown Award (2006).

Paul lives in Bozeman, Montana, with his spouse, the artist Marsha Karle. Paul and Marsha have collaborated as author and artist on six books, a series of sets of interpretive fine-arts cards, and other projects.

Shipping additional, $6.95.

Donated By:

Paul Schullery