Liar's Code: Growing Up Fishing
By (Author) Richard Chiappone
Skyhorse Publishing
Sky Pony Press
3rd May 2016
United States
General
Non Fiction
Memoirs
799.1092
Hardback
220
Width 152mm, Height 229mm, Spine 25mm
435g
Warm, funny, and memorable musings on a life spent fishing.
With this eclectic collection of personal essays taking him from his childhood haunts along the industrial Niagara River of the 1960s to Alaska and the saltwater flats of the Caribbean, Richard Chiappone elongates the fishing-writing genre, suggesting that he finds almost anything a fisherman does interestinganything but the actual fishing.
In one piece, he gets no farther than the curb outside his upstate New York childhood home, futilely waiting for his ride to the rivers of his dreams. In another account he describes an afternoon, standing in a midwinter snow bank, casting to house cats. With humor and self-skewering wit, Chiappone admits he cant cast very well, ties some of the ugliest flies in the world, and spent nineteen years of his life trying to catch a permit.
The essays, both funny and touching, reveal him as a writer of stark contradictions: a man who despises winter and loves living in Alaska; who laments having spent half his life just downstream from the infamous Love Canal, and simultaneously remembers those years with elegiac fondness. Lifting his gaze past the tip of his fly rod, and beyond the river and the fish all the way into his own heart, he portrays everything from a sentimental memory of his mother to his doubts about the adequacy of his grief over a dead daughter, making this compilation a kind of memoir in linked essaysa fishermans life examined.
Skyhorse Publishing is proud to publish a broad range of books for fishermen. Our books for anglers include titles that focus on fly fishing, bait fishing, fly-casting, spin casting, deep sea fishing, and surf fishing. Our books offer both practical advice on tackle, techniques, knots, and more, as well as lyrical prose on fishing for bass, trout, salmon, crappie, baitfish, catfish, and more. While not every title we publish becomes a New York Times bestseller or a national bestseller, we are committed to publishing books on subjects that are sometimes overlooked by other publishers and to authors whose work might not otherwise find a home.
Rich Chiappone recallsaccurately and poignantlythe longings, frustrations, and low-rent triumphs of childhood fishing and brings them forward through the better part of a lifetime, proving that although fishermen do grow up, they never really change. John Gierach, author of All Fisherman Are Liarsand member of the Fly Fishing Hall of Fame
With a unique blend of insight, literacy, irreverence, and self-deprecating wit, Rich Chiappone has accomplished a goal even more challenging than landing a permit on a fly: the creation of a classic. E. Donnall Thomas Jr., two-time winner of the Traver Award, author of Redfish, Bluefish, Ladyfish, Snook
Sometimes humorous, often bittersweet, and always insightful, Liars Code is a work that will appeal to anyone who appreciates great writing. Dave Atcheson, author of Dead Reckoning and Navigating a Life on the Last Frontier
Rich Chiappone cracks me up. These stories, with their sidelong glances and arched eyebrows, would not be nearly so much fun if he caught more fish. Tom Kizzia, author of New York Times bestseller Pilgrim's Wilderness
Chiappone speaks to all of us, even those unfortunate few whove never picked up a fishing rod in their life. Liars Code is about fishing, yes; but its also about all the other, richer joys that abound in this life. No lie: Rich Chiappones paean to fishing is a keeper! David Abrams, author of Fobbit, book blogger at The Quivering Pen
Liars Code is quintessential Richard Chiappone: humorous yet haunting, pithy but never precious. Each essay swims from the page with the reader in tow. John Larison, author of Holding Lies and Whiskey When Were Dry
You dont need to know a chub from a chinook to love these stories, which are much, much less about catching the big one than they are about family, friendship, and following dreams. Nancy Lord, former Alaska Writer Laureate, author of Fishcamp and Beluga Days
Rich Chiappone writes like a magician, somehow making you long for a childhood among the Union Carbide stack and old fishermens stories. He makes you wish to have had a life so full. Pete Fromm, author of If Not For This and The Names of the Stars
From the mighty Niagara River, to the startling wonder of Alaska, to the dreamland of the Caribbean, Richard Chiappone tells vivid, meaty tales and proves once again that there is more to fishing than the fish. John Pitarresi, outdoor columnist for the Utica Observer-Dispatch
Rich Chappione spins a happy tale. Liars Code reminds us, again and again, that its good to be alive and fishingconsidering the alternative. Scott Sadil, author of Fly Tales, Cast from the Edge, and Lost in Wyoming
As an occasional participant in Richs adventures, I can attest that Liars Code, as Huck Finn would say, is a mostly true book, with some stretchers. His writing is funny, warm, and perceives the universal truths of our lives through a singular lensin this case, fishing. A delightful read. Will Rice, author of Fly-Fishing Secrets of Alaskas Best Guides
Rich Chiappone recallsaccurately and poignantlythe longings, frustrations, and low-rent triumphs of childhood fishing and brings them forward through the better part of a lifetime, proving that although fishermen do grow up, they never really change. John Gierach, author of All Fisherman Are Liarsand member of the Fly Fishing Hall of Fame
With a unique blend of insight, literacy, irreverence, and self-deprecating wit, Rich Chiappone has accomplished a goal even more challenging than landing a permit on a fly: the creation of a classic. E. Donnall Thomas Jr., two-time winner of the Traver Award, author of Redfish, Bluefish, Ladyfish, Snook
Sometimes humorous, often bittersweet, and always insightful, Liars Code is a work that will appeal to anyone who appreciates great writing. Dave Atcheson, author of Dead Reckoning and Navigating a Life on the Last Frontier
Rich Chiappone cracks me up. These stories, with their sidelong glances and arched eyebrows, would not be nearly so much fun if he caught more fish. Tom Kizzia, author of New York Times bestseller Pilgrim's Wilderness
Chiappone speaks to all of us, even those unfortunate few whove never picked up a fishing rod in their life. Liars Code is about fishing, yes; but its also about all the other, richer joys that abound in this life. No lie: Rich Chiappones paean to fishing is a keeper! David Abrams, author of Fobbit, book blogger at The Quivering Pen
Liars Code is quintessential Richard Chiappone: humorous yet haunting, pithy but never precious. Each essay swims from the page with the reader in tow. John Larison, author of Holding Lies and Whiskey When Were Dry
You dont need to know a chub from a chinook to love these stories, which are much, much less about catching the big one than they are about family, friendship, and following dreams. Nancy Lord, former Alaska Writer Laureate, author of Fishcamp and Beluga Days
Rich Chiappone writes like a magician, somehow making you long for a childhood among the Union Carbide stack and old fishermens stories. He makes you wish to have had a life so full. Pete Fromm, author of If Not For This and The Names of the Stars
From the mighty Niagara River, to the startling wonder of Alaska, to the dreamland of the Caribbean, Richard Chiappone tells vivid, meaty tales and proves once again that there is more to fishing than the fish. John Pitarresi, outdoor columnist for the Utica Observer-Dispatch
Rich Chappione spins a happy tale. Liars Code reminds us, again and again, that its good to be alive and fishingconsidering the alternative. Scott Sadil, author of Fly Tales, Cast from the Edge, and Lost in Wyoming
As an occasional participant in Richs adventures, I can attest that Liars Code, as Huck Finn would say, is a mostly true book, with some stretchers. His writing is funny, warm, and perceives the universal truths of our lives through a singular lensin this case, fishing. A delightful read. Will Rice, author of Fly-Fishing Secrets of Alaskas Best Guides
Richard Chiappone, a two-time recipient of the Robert Traver Award, is the author of the story collection Water of an Undetermined Depth. His writing has appeared in anthologies and national publications including Playboy, the Sun, and Grays Sporting Journal. One of his stories was made into an award-winning short film, another has been featured on BBC Radio. He teaches writing in the University of Alaska Anchorage Master of Fine Arts Program and serves on the faculty of the annual Kachemak Bay Writers Conference in the town of Homer, Alaska, where he lives with his wife and cats.