Casting Shadows: Fish and Fishing in Britain
By (Author) Tom Fort
HarperCollins Publishers
William Collins
7th July 2021
4th March 2021
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Wildlife: general interest
597
Paperback
368
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 28mm
320g
A Times and Sunday Times Book of the Year
Peer into the secret, silent world of the freshwater fish and explore evolution of the art and industry of fishing in Britain's rivers and streams.
From cunning Neolithic traps, intricate Roman nets and quarrellous Victorian societies to the evolution of angling and eventual gentrification of river access, this history spans thousands of years and ends with a poignant call to protect the underwater world from the horrors of industrial fishing and farming.
Meanwhile, another thread of the narrative weaves in the lives of the fishes themselves: the incredible struggles of the Atlantic salmon and secretive eel; the pike, a lean and camouflaged predator; the carp, huge and stately, begetter of obsessions; the exquisite spotted brown trout and its silver cousin, the grayling.
Lives built on and around fishing have largely faded from Britain, but fishermen and conservationists are working tirelessly to prevent the same fate befalling the fishes.
A Times and Sunday Times Book of the Year
Tom Forts wonderful social history of angling is the ideal book for fish fanciers A wonderful and unsnobbish social history of angling by a master fisherman Max Hastings, Sunday Times
His writings cover a wide range of subjects he therefore brings to this book a more practised pen than most angling writers bring to theirs Literary Review
Casting Shadows is a beautifully written, unexpectedly humorous and fastidiously researched expression of gratitude for creatures and for a sport.Fort recreates vivid vignettes of moments in anglings heritage with novelistic flourish Patrick Galbraith, The Times
Tom Forts Casting Shadows offers garrulous witness to a fine passion [Fort] is a sort of aquatic anthropologist, an angler with an infectious curiosity about all things fishy The aroma of wonder seeps through his sentences. Buried beneath the anecdote and the arcana is the poignancy of the fishermans encounter with nature A plea for attention to the radiant world London Review of Books
Tom Fort leads us into all sorts of fishy places, with their delightful sights and smells, and introduces us to rough-hewn, fishy characters and we love it His writing must give any fisherman nostalgic thoughts. Equally, any non-fisherman will surely be enticed by the scenes he depicts, and amazed by the facts of history and natural history he reveals Oldie
Marvellous Jeremy Paxman, Saga Magazine
An essential antidote to a modern world Fly Fishing & Fly Tying magazine
The ideal book for lock-down Thought-provoking intelligent and well researched You will not be disappointed Journal of the Piscatorial Society
Praise for Tom Fort
This is a captivating studyTom Fort is incapable of writing a dull sentence'
Financial Times
A fascinating, beautifully written and deeply peculiar book New Scientist
Tom Fort, a former editor at the BBC, is the fishing correspondent for the Financial Times. He lives in Berkshire with his wife and children.