The Books that Defined our Angling Generation

J

John Bailey

Guest
Little by little the boxes of books are being unpacked and placed in their new Herefordshire bookshelves. Many are, of course, on angling, my collection built over sixty-plus years, and I’ve been rating them unofficially in my head as I stack them. Most are okay. Some are more than that, but a few are, in my opinion, classics – volumes that have defined the angling lives of those of us born between 1940 and, say, 1980. These, in my opinion, are the books that have most influenced the sport during our lifetime, and here I make a tentative start in listing them.

But I know I am not some all-powerful, all-knowing judge on this. I know I have made howling omissions. I have not included works published before 1940, simply because though we might well love Chalmers or Sheringham or Walton even, I’m going to stick out my neck and say, lovely as they are, they have not shaped the way we fish today. Nor have I mentioned any writer who is not English, I think – bar one, perhaps. What!? No Moc Morgan, for example, you will howl. You are very probably right, but I have simply gone for those writers who have changed the scene… AS I SEE IT! Please, our Scottish, Irish and Welsh friends, put me right on this.

We all had to start somewhere, and I think I am on safe ground to say very many of us, over two million if the sales figures are to be believed, learned our trade from Mr Crabtree Goes Fishing (1949), so no surprises there. But also through the Fifties the How To Catch Them series also contributed hugely to the learning process of so many of us. Indeed, collect the series, and there is not much in angling that is not covered.



Specimen hunting, in one form or another, has been a big influence the last sixty-off years, and two titans are, of course, Richard Walker (I told you there are no surprises) and also, I’d suggest, the recently departed Frank Guttfield. In Search Of Big Fish (1964) had all my teenage friends fired up, and of course he contributed to Fishing As We Find It (1967) which we have already ecstatically reviewed. And it was Frank that put together the hugely influential The Big Fish Scene (1978) that resonates to this day. I’m not sure what the sales figures were for any of these books compared to Crabtree, but they surely had a wide influence and ripple effect?




Carp fishing exploded onto the angling scene in our lifetimes. Like carp or loathe them, we have to accept that they are the spine of the angling tackle and bait industry today. The spiritual origins of carp fishing, I believe, are found in Confessions Of A Carp Fisher (1950) by BB, but of course its intellectual roots were planted by Richard Walker in Stillwater Angling (1953). If any book has had a more powerful influence I’d be surprised… but a trout fisher might well disagree. For many of us of a certain age perhaps Quest For Carp (1972) by Jack Hilton was the bible that really fired us, just as it was The Carp Strikes Back (1983) by Rod Hutchinson that turned this branch of angling into a cult pursuit. For those of us a little out of Rod’s fast lane, Chris Yates’ Casting At The Sun (1986) will always be our go-to favourite.




The carp equivalent in the game world was the stratospheric growth of stillwater trout fishing in reservoirs, pits and lakes from the end of the Second World War. There were, of course, great names in the early days like Shrive and Ivens (and Walker again), but for many of us the classic Stillwater Fly Fishing (1975) by Brian Clarke was the book that shaped the way we fished the fly for rainbows. His examination of fly life and the various trout rise forms remain startlingly powerful to this day. I’d also list his follow-up with John Goddard, The Trout And The Fly (1980) as an equally influential work that forced us to think just how trout behave. Can the Hugh Falkus tome Sea Trout (1962) really be beaten, even to this day? And I include Hugh’s on/off pal Arthur Oglesby here too. His 1971 work Salmon is a model of sound good sense from first to last. I doubt it has been bettered as a standard text book on the subject, for the beginner especially.




Carp, stillwater trouting and pike fishing have all advanced monumentally in our lifetime. Certainly all us young Norfolk pike bloods would have put Fishing For Big Pike (1971) by Rickards and Webb at the top of our own inspirations, even more than Fred Buller’s Pike a few years later. Mind you, Fred’s follow up, The Domesday Book Of Pike (1979) was the work that drove us to fish for monsters, however wet and cold we might be. I’m going to mention Pike, The Predator Becomes The Prey (1985) by Bailey and Page, simply because the world of piking exploded after Rickards and Webb, and this compilation was vital in bringing it up to date.



And why are we anglers at all? Probably because of books that have stimulated us and excited us and driven us to become better. For us oldies, perhaps we look back to Fisherman’s Bedside Book (1945) by BB as the work where it all began for us. I’d also plump for Going Fishing (1942) by Negley Farson, I Know A Good Place (1989) by Clive Gammon and Somewhere Down The Crazy River (1992) by Boote and Wade as books that have kept the spirit of the sport burning bright.

There you go, I’m done. Light on game I know. Non-existent on non-English writers… and women! Nothing at all on sea fishing. What about the match scene? Get stuck in. What should stay? What should go? And most especially, what of your own personal passions? If you have a moment, help broaden this list till we are all satisfied…

The post The Books that Defined our Angling Generation first appeared on FishingMagic Magazine.

Continue reading...
 

Peter Jacobs

Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Dec 21, 2001
Messages
31,049
Reaction score
12,244
Location
In God's County: Wiltshire
"Confessions" by BB (Denys J. Watkins-Pitchford) was always in the side pocket of my rucksack when on overnight bivvy trips.

I'd have to include in my own list books like, "No need to Lie" and "Drop Me a Line" by Richard Walker . . . .
 
Last edited:

The Sogster

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 2, 2008
Messages
928
Reaction score
1,103
Location
South Yorkshire
I'm surprised not to see a mention of Tony Miles and Trefor Wests "Quest for Barbel" or Bob Church and contributors 'Big Barbel - Bonded by the Challenge", both of which seem seminal books for the era and definitely contributed to the sharp rise in the popularity of Barbel fishing.

For me the two most influential books have been "Float Fishing with Ivan Marks" and Bob Roberts 'Complete Book of Legering"
 

mark halsey

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 2, 2009
Messages
60
Reaction score
7
Location
Surrey, Nr Leatherhead
fb.jpeg
 

108831

Well-known member
Joined
May 11, 2017
Messages
8,761
Reaction score
4,194
Billy Lane's encyclopedia of float fishing,Ivan Marks match fishing,as even though shotting patterns have evolved greatly,the general thought process remains the same and holds good.

this doesn't come from me as an ex-matchmen,but as an angler who loves floatfishing....
 
Last edited:

chevin4

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 27, 2020
Messages
857
Reaction score
1,258
Location
Herts
As an all-round angler No need to Lie Richard Walker, Walkers Pitch, Gravel Pit Fishing Peter Stone
 

John Aston

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 24, 2007
Messages
929
Reaction score
2,351
As a ten year old , BB's Bedside Book fired my enthusiasm in the early Sixties , when my fishing mentor gave me his 1946 edition . It still inspires, and is the first book I'd rescue from the proverbial burning house .

You don't need to be a fly angler to be captured by the spells woven by Lord Grey of Fallodon and Harry Plunket Greene . Both evoke the joy of angling , and of a lost and far simpler era.

Somewhere down the crazy river is an astonishing book. It is superbly written and endlessly entertaining

Much as I admire Messrs Walker , Stone , Gibbinson and Buller their writing was essentially functional , and it is a very long time since I reread any of them .

I think I have said before that the contemporary American writer John Gierach writes better than anyone alive on fishing. Like another favourite, Ernest Hemingway , he has a wonderfully punchy , economical style and isn't afraid to explore the metaphysical dimension of our sport . Unlike Hemingway, he is also very , very funny . I write myself , and each time I read either of these two giants, I wonder how they make brilliant prose look so easy.

It should almost go without saying that Chris Yates is one of the greats , and any of his books will remain a joy for as long as people fish. I cringe when I see the doomed attempts some have made in the...err.. more traditional angling press to emulate his combination of whimsy and lyricism. It ends up more parody than homage .

Thy rod and thy creel- Odell Shepherd . An extraordinary and truly wonderful book by the US poet and professor ,who went on to win the Pulitzer Prize .

My final nominee isn't even a fishing writer . She is Nan Shepherd , no relation to Odell but a teacher near the Cairngorms and her book , The Living Mountain transformed how I looked at and enjoyed the natural world. It also changed my approach to and enjoyment of angling .

Like all of us , I am sometimes asked why I fish . If the person asking is a good friend , I give them a copy of Gierach's Trout Bum . It works ... It doesn't matter if you fly fish or not , do read this book. Its appeal transcends fly fishing - or even fishing itself.
 
Last edited by a moderator:

peterjg

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 10, 2012
Messages
1,819
Reaction score
1,569
This Fishing by L A parker
Canal Fishing by Kenneth Seaman
Fantastic Feeder Fishing by Archie Braddock
Carp Now and Then by Rod Hutchinson
 

simon burt

New member
Joined
Feb 28, 2007
Messages
4
Reaction score
10
How to Fish by Chris Yates is a very thoughtful read. All his books are great of course. Fred Taylor's Favourite Swims rescued me from a dull detention in the school library and I was really happy to get given the same copy 10 years later when they cleared out 'unwanted' stock.
 

John Bailey

Well-known member
Feature Writer
Joined
Nov 16, 2020
Messages
251
Reaction score
416
It’s been great to read your comments on my tentative list of great “modernish” books, and some of your comments I have to respond to, if allowable! I also have to say straight off I knew Clive Gammon in his later years, and loved the guy. The more he drank, the thicker his Welsh accent became, so I sort of knew he didn’t hail from Slough. I see Clive as an angler and scholar of the universe.

Sogster mentions works by Tony Miles, Trevor West and Bob Church. Well, honest, I did brood about all three, especially as I have known all three, some quite well. Tony and Bob I was particularly close to, and both were true gentlemen as well as being superb anglers. Bob, especially, was the true all-rounder and I loved him for that. They did not get my personal nod because I’d suggest they followed on from pioneers like Guttfield, rather than being first in the field. If I were to include them, where would one stop? Peter Stone for sure, and possibly Graham Marsden, and so it goes on.

I am rightly pulled up for omitting works by Ivan Marks and Billy Lane on float fishing. Sorry. Especially Ivan. I used to, on occasion, sit and marvel at him catching “my” Wensum roach at a rate I could only dream of.

I half agree that omitting Walker’s No Need To Lie was an oversight, but I still feel he was a better technician than poet. However, I can be excused for leaving out Plunkett Greene and Where The Bright Waters Meet because he is out of my time line. If I were to delve further back, where on earth would I or anyone else stop? Fly Fishing, Lord Grey? At The Tail Of The Weir, Patrick Chalmers? Summer On The Test, J W Hills? Richard Jeffries, HT Sheringham, Charles St John? There is no end to the greats of earlier eras, it seems.

And as for the suggestion of The Living Mountain, don’t get me started. I have long believed anglers and nature lovers are, or should be, indivisible. I’d personally encourage anyone to read Our Place, Mark Cocker and The Running Hare by John Lewis-Stempel. There’s a lovely work by a shepherd, whose name I cannot remember, and whose books I cannot find in the boxes waiting to be unpacked – help please. When it comes to writing about fish in nature, I think The Run Of The River by Mark Hume is unsurpassed. It is all about steelhead, but blimey, read it if you can find it.

How about this for a thought? I have always felt fishing and cricket are very similar in some ways, especially in the depth of their literature. I was therefore infuriated to read that Tom Harrison, chief executive of the English Cricket Board, is keen to promote Big Bash-type competitions at the expense of Test cricket. His stance is that Tests are beloved by “white males over fifty”, and even if so, what is wrong with that? Don’t over-fifties have any say any more? Isn’t Test cricket worshipped in India... it certainly was when I watched it over there, and my wife says it still is in her native Sri Lanka. And are not many more subtle pleasures made better by age? Test match cricket, fly fishing, float fishing, reading books by BB are perhaps delights thirty year olds today will come to appreciate twenty years into the future?
 

chevin4

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 27, 2020
Messages
857
Reaction score
1,258
Location
Herts
I can certainly see comparisons to cricket. 75 runs scored by a batsman where the ball is turning square is a bigger achievement than scoring say 150 on a flat track. Simarily catching a 6lb tench on a difficult water is more worthy than say catching a 9lb fish from the latest Kent going water. I think I read somewhere that Len Hutton regarded a score 77on a "sticky dog" wicket as his greatest innings this from a man who had a score of over 350 against Australia to his name. I think a test match is the true test to a players ability.
 
Top