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The Moon Pulled Up an Acre of Bass: A Flyrodder's Odyssey at Montauk Point

The Moon Pulled Up an Acre of Bass: A Flyrodder's Odyssey at Montauk Point

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great drug for all fishaholics!
Review: A great read for anyone who understands great passion in the sport of fishing. What a priveledge it is for all of us to experience a month long fly-fishing adventure at Montauk through the skilled prose of Peter Kaminsky. This book reads as deliciously as Peters' recepies sound for fresh grilled Striped Bass accompanied by a burst of just ripe local vegetables...... Pardon me, as I have to go "Blitz" the kitchen right about now!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: The Guides don't control Mother Nature
Review: I enjoyed the book and the concept, but the fawning treatment of certain guides (that probably gave Kaminisky free rides) read too much like promotional materials.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Nostalgic masterpiece
Review: I received this as a Xmas gift from my daughter. After reading the first chapter I became enthralled with the writng and how it took me back to my youger days when I frequented Montauk and enjoyed not as sophiticated but more pristine times. In spite of what ever else he does Peter is one of us who cant get enough of
fishing. I had a fly rod in hand when I was about seven. I am now 77 and still get the same thrill on the strike as I did then. Peters story brings it all back and carries me back to when 50 lb bass were not as exceptional as they now seem to be. He has not just written another fish story. This work is outstanding in its class.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A must read if you flyfish for stripers.
Review: If you have ever caught a striper on a flyrod you will enjoy Kaminsky's Month of fishing. He has a calm manner of expressing the explosive nature of the striper. He has shared his experiences during the annual run of stripers around Montauk Point. There are plenty of technical manuals of how to do this or where to do that regarding flyfishing for stripers and this isn't one of them. Yet, you can learn from his first hand experiences fishing, not guiding but the actual art of going to the waters in pursuit of the striper. Wheter he is fishing the flats, shores or from a boat his descriptions of his experience are what make this book. The names of his associates have faded but the places he fished, the techniques of casting and presentation, and the fights he described remain. If you enjoy flyfishing for striper you will enjoy the moments of time he selectively shares with his readers.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A wonderfull read
Review: The author gives us a great look into not only the stiper fishng world, but the culture and heritage of the east coast. A pleasure to read, cover to cover. Even for those of us that may never see stripers in the salt, this is defintely a worthwhile read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A wonderfull read
Review: The Moon Pulled Up An Acre Of Bass

Fishing, cooking, and having a good time with your friends at your favorite vacation house, what could get better than that? That's the "good life" described by Peter Kaminsky in his nonfiction novel The Moon Pulled Up An Acre Of Bass.
Kaminsky shared his humorous fishing stories in October 2000 throughout the whole book. He picked the month of October because of the great fishing experiences he had with bass fishing and many other fish. One of his memorable moments was when he termed the expression "The moon pulled up an acre of bass." He used this term when he stood in amazement and shock while gazing at the water with what he called an "Acre" of bass while the moon glared at his face. Beside being a great fisherman and having a love of fishing, Kaminsky loved other things.
One of the things he loved to do was he loved to cook. He would love to catch fish, have friends over and then cook the fish in his kitchen that he loved. He said the kitchen had "Acres of counter space." Also what he liked to do was to spend time with his friends onshore and offshore. When he was with his friends he became a great fisherman. This happened because all his good fisherman friends gave him all various kinds of advice, which added up to him being a great fisherman. For example, one of his friends taught him how to cast under the wind on a windy day. This was great for him because then he could basically fish whenever he wanted since gusty weather wouldn't make it difficult for him.
Overall I really liked this book because I could connect to it so much. I could do this because I also have a love of fishing and the book takes place on Long Island. I have much background information of Long Island because I live there. As you can see, this book was mainly about Peter Kaminsky and his love of fishing with his friends. Since he and his friends were hilarious, this book turned out to be filled with humor. I really liked this book and I would recommend this book to anyone who loves fishing, comedy, and nonfiction novels.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Superb read
Review: what a marvelous book. more than any book i have read on fishing or outdoors, this one is well written. it captures the feelings of the changing of seasons and the hope and dread of how things will be that day. are there fish still in area or have they moved out. what will today bring. one learns a lot about fishing and life and the passion one can have for something. at same time it is not obvious or heavy-handed with some zen philosophy or fishing as allegory. ultimately it is about the love of fishing with a fly rod and sharing that with a few other friends who have the same feelings. while reading this gem of a book, one learns a lot about fishing. i live on the east end of long island but i didnt really know the areas he talked about and the history of some of them. the author really makes the region and the people come alive. it is like you are having breakfast in the local "greasy spoon" with the guys who fish and talk about it. you can see the guys with the bedraggled looks while they try to glean some info on where action is without giving away any of their own secrets. you can see the birds working the water and feel the hard tug. you can also feel the days where nothing working/nothing happening but it isnt dissappointing. the possibilty is almost enough ....but not quite. i have only fished for stripers once with a fly rod but after i read this book i made arrangements to go out to montauk area to try it. if it is 1/4 quarter as good as the author makes it out to be, it will be well worth it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: flyfishing, New York style
Review: While it is certainly the case that flyfishing has given rise to more good writing than any sport other than baseball, it is also the case that the pleasures of this literature tend to be somewhat refined. Flyfishing is, for the most part, the pursuit of the leisure classes, the rest of use spinning reels to baitfish or to go after bass with a variety of garish lures. We associate bass fishing with the sound of overpowerful boats and the sour smell of stale beer. Flyfishing gives off a faint whiff of soggy tweed, mixed with pipe tobacco and perhaps a fine brandy. Your ne'er-do-well uncle bass fishes, your successful granddad flyfished. All of which makes Peter Kaminsky's new book something of a rarity; kind of a more muscular, less cultured, less aristocratic, flyfishing memoir.
In large part this is owing to the setting that Kaminsky has chosen; no trips to Idaho or Montana here; no Australian Outback or Scottish Highlands; instead he spends the late Summer/early Fall out at Montauk Point, Long Island, fishing with friends and family, guides and sportsmen, locals and commercial fisherman for stiped bass, albacore, and the like. Both the type of fishing--for bigger fish, on rough seas, battling surfcasters and other boats--and the crowded and competitive conditions make this much different than the typical pastoral treatise on flyfishing. It's a very New York kind of fishing going on here, democratic and combative.
Beyond the unusual milieu, the book is a must read for the quality of Kaminsky's prose.... Fall's just around the corner now, and if you can't get to Montauk, this book's the next best thing.
GRADE : A


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