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A River Runs Through It and Other Stories : Fortieth-Anniversary Edition

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    ¡°If there is a smarter, more affecting meditation on the themes of fathers and sons, brothers, the pleasures of the natural world, love, loss, and the haunting power of water, I have yet to come across it. As it has for many others, A River Runs through It became for me a kind of central text, equal parts fishing primer, literary masterwork, and spiritual guide. . . . It remains one of my most beloved books.¡±
    (Jon Gluck New York Times)

    ¡°Maclean¡¯s book-acerbic, laconic, deadpan-rings out of a rich American tradition that includes Mark Twain, Kin Hubbard, Richard Bissell, Jean Shepherd, and Nelson Algren.¡±
    (James R. Frakes New York Times Book Review)

    ¡°It is an enchanted tale.¡±
    (Roger Sale New York Review of Books)

    ¡°The title novella is the prize. . . . Something unique and marvelous: a story that is at once an evocation of nature's miracles and realities and a probing of human mysteries. Wise, witty, wonderful, Maclean spins his tales, casts his flies, fishes the rivers and the woods for what he remembers from his youth in the Rockies.¡±
    (Barbara Bannon Publishers Weekly)

    ¡°A masterpiece. . . . This is more than stunning fiction: It is a lyric record of a time and a life, shining with Maclean¡¯s special gift for calling the reader¡¯s attention to arts of all kinds-the arts that work in nature, in personality, in social intercourse, in fly-fishing.¡±
    (Kenneth M. Pierce Village Voice)

    ¡°Maclean¡¯s book is surely destined to be one of those rare memoirs that can be called a masterpiece. . . . Earthy, whimsical, authoritative, wise; it touches the heart without blushing and traces lasting images for the eye. . . . This book is a gem.¡±
    (Nick Lyons Fly-Fisherman)

    ¸ñÂ÷

    Foreword by Robert Redford (2017)
    Acknowledgments (1976)A River Runs through It
    Logging and Pimping and "Your Pal, Jim"
    USFS 1919: The Ranger, the Cook, and a Hole in the Sky

    Ã¥¼Ò°³

    When Norman Maclean sent the manuscript of A River Runs through It to New York publishers, he received a slew of rejections. ¡°It has trees in it,¡± one editor replied. Forty years later, the title novella is widely recognized as one of the great American tales of the twentieth century, and Maclean as one of the most beloved writers of our time. The finely distilled product of seventy years of a life of often surprising rapture, for fly fishing, for the woods and their people, and for the interlocked beauty of life and art, A River Runs through It has over the decades established itself as a classic of the American West. This new edition will introduce a fresh audience to Maclean¡¯s beautiful prose and understated emotional insights.

    Elegantly redesigned, A River Runs through It includes a new foreword by Robert Redford, whose film adaptation of River turns twenty-five in 2017. Based on Maclean¡¯s own experiences as a young man, the two novellas and short story it contains are set in the small towns and mountains of western Montana. It is a world populated with drunks, loggers, card sharks, and whores, but also one rich in the pleasures of fly fishing, logging, cribbage, and family. By turns raunchy and elegiac, these superb tales express, in Maclean¡¯s own words, ¡°a little of the love I have for the earth as it goes by.¡±

    Though he grew up in the first decades of the twentieth century in the western Rockies?working summers in logging camps and for the US Forest Service and cultivating a lifelong passion for the dry fly?it was only at the age of seventy, as a retired English professor, that Norman Maclean discovered what he was meant to do: write. Moving and profound, A River Runs through It honors the literary legacy of a man who improbably gave voice to an essential corner of the American soul. ¡°I am haunted by waters,¡± Maclean writes at the close of A River Runs through It. So, now, are we all.

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