cover image Early Love and Brook Trout: With Watercolor Paintings by the Author

Early Love and Brook Trout: With Watercolor Paintings by the Author

James Prosek. Lyons Press, $24.95 (160pp) ISBN 978-1-58574-039-0

In an elegant work of prose and painting, Prosek (The Complete Angler) dips freely into his past and recalls events ranging from notable hunts for brook trout--his favorite fish--to frustrated forays into teenage affection. Interspersed evenly in this coffee-table presentation are examples of Prosek's deft watercolor prints, which often speak just as effectively as the writing itself. Though muted and painterly, Prosek's watercolors render their subjects more crisply than photographs. Likewise, his writing at its best is simple, earnest and resonant, at times leaving readers with the quiet, meditative afterglow of the nature writings of Annie Dillard and Sigurd F. Olson. The book's flaw lies with the occasionally awkward variations on its central theme: the connection between the cherished brook trout and Prosek's amorous intentions can range from humorous to tenuous. ""We shared a love for secret places,"" Prosek writes of a friend, ""and imagined there were gnomes and trolls living in the rock ledge of his yard. This same sensibility translated into enjoyment of trout and, later, women."" The correlation goes from unclear to uncouth with one chapter title, which is named after both a pond and a woman: ""Kate's Hole."" But such blemishes are not common, and Prosek's motif successfully conveys the depth of his passion for fishing. ""I have written this little book,"" he says, ""in order to capture something in myself that I never want to forget."" Readers will have little doubt that he has made a lasting impression. (May)