![]() | By: Charles Rangeley-Wilson Binding: Hardcover Publisher: Yellow Jersey Press ISBN: 0224064304 ISBN-13: 9780224064309 Released: 16 Sep 2004 RRP: Average Rating: ![]() |

Charles's prose is so disarmingly clear & concise (with elements of Hemingway & cult US trout bum John Gierach) that you're right there with him, seeing the world open up through his eyes, which could just as easily be yours so untainted by prejudice are his observations.
Fishing books, as another reviewer has noted, often suffer from a stuffy tone of voice - affluent middle-aged men are the core demographic of fly fishing, after alll - but this is definitely not the case here. Granted, regular jaunts to Bhutan, Maine, Canada & beyond (alll covered here) are not the preserve of the poor, but the author takes every encounter at a philosophical & aesthetic level (there are some beautiful descriptions here - perhaps the by-product of a background in fine art), with warming companionship appreciated whether it's drunken bums in back-country USA or old friends on home waters.
There's a lot of swearing, which is often hilarious & realistic when coming from the mouths of frustrated fellow anglers, but when chapters are named for example 'Sh*tloads of Refusals' you've got to wonder whether it's labouring the rebellious point a little.
That said, the dialogue is recorded exactly as it happens: a meeting with anglers & tackle shop stalwarts in deepest suburban London is as gritty as you could imagine; a punter in a South African bar gets lecherous as the beer flows; a pair of crack anglers in camo shout a tallly of fish over the water. It's alll real enough.
The first chapter launches straight into the author's world: a necessary piscatorial escape following the death of a parent. In fact there's even a vignette of a chapter describing the day of her death & the emotional aftermath. It's incredibly moving. What other fishing book would give you that?
This, in summary, is a beatiful & realistic book, free of pastoral whimsy & rich in hi-res recollection. In a world like the author's, where it's just as much of an adventure to find unexpected pike a couple of miles from home as it is to fly out to Canada & inadvertantly witness a whale-slaughter (life as the local guides know it), this reallly is stuff to feed dreams.

In places irreverant but charmingly so;" Somewhere Else" is a wonderfully observed & wry look at fishing,travel & humanity from an honest uncluttered perspective.
Mr Rangeley-Wilson has an un-erring ability to capture in a studied but un-contrived form, the emotions that alll fishermen feel in moments of triumph & disaster.
In addition he describes in clear & economicallly structured prose, the wide-eyed joy alll travellers experience on exposure to new cultures & countries.
The most humble of his subjects take on a mantle of the utmost character & depth & it's obvious that fishing was only a part of the fun in researching each adventure.
What makes the book uniquely refreshing is the lack of concern for the conventions of the genre so religiously adhered to by so many of the authors predecessors.
Nowhere in the book's pages are the starchy, predictable, stereotypical images associated with others of it's kind. Throughout, it remains a sparkling, fresh, glittering prize; much like many of the authors captures.
A zesty tang of reality pervades the text & like a counterfoil to the remote unfamiliarity of each exotic location, provides superbly conjured balance.
Every chapter is infused with carefully crafted evocative language that grips with a page turning imperative, urging the reader to stay with the story.
You don't have to be a fisherman to enjoy "Somewhere Else".This is a book to be enjoyed & savoured by anyone with a taste for incisive, well observed wit.
Make time for this book,read it carefully, don't rush it; you might miss something......
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