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Reviews for American Angler in Australia

 American Angler in Australia magazine reviews

The average rating for American Angler in Australia based on 2 reviews is 3.5 stars.has a rating of 3.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2017-02-03 00:00:00
2002was given a rating of 4 stars Rio Lampard
Interesting for sure! Gaffing man-eating sharks at the boat, kookaburras, albatross, gum trees, record breaking game fish and more. Not much 'meat' to this book but what it does contain is delicious and perfectly rare. Long before Australia was considered a destination for game fish, Zane Grey had a hunch and set out to prove it. In doing so, records were broken, and Australia soon became a destination for anglers and sportsmen the world over. Just like most adept anglers, Grey was full of himself. However, he had the snuff to back it up, unlike the 'great' anglers we see on TV and in print today. When most folks think of Zane Grey they think of Riders of the Purple Sage and other dime-store western garbage he penned. Grey mainly wrote his sappy and wildly popular westerns that read more like romance novels than gritty westerns so he could go fishing in luxuriant and extravagant fashion. Zane Grey was the Howard Hughes of angling with many inventions and records to his name. And just for the record, I still think Riders of the Purple Sage is a great book and story. But when I think of Zane Grey now I think of an angler first and an author of dime-store westerns second.
Review # 2 was written on 2016-09-14 00:00:00
2002was given a rating of 3 stars Kurt Surber
This book is a collection of G.K. Chesterton's non-fictional writing on philosophy, social commentary and religion. With this book, I have fallen in love with GK Chesterton the man, if not the writer. He was an enormous man, with a fat walrus mustache. He dressed so shabbily that his wife dressed him in an opera cape, strange hat and a sword cane so that people wouldn't notice his shabby clothes because of the eccentricity of his dress. He ate a lot, drank a lot, and was merry a lot. He was jovial and generous, very spiritual, and yet not afraid to live in this world to the fullest. He valued Humor and Humility above all things, loved a good joke, and reveled in paradox. All of this is revealed throughout his writing. In one essay, he expounds upon the luckiness of a man who thinks he has discovered a new land, but realizes upon arrival that he has sailed back to England. He gets both things that man needs most: the uncertainty and excitement of adventure and wonder, and the cozy stability of home. In another, he talks about how you should love the world for all its gladness, and if it is sad, you should then love it more. In another, he expounds upon how a child sees a tree and a lamp post with equal wonder, and how we should retain that wonder at every day life as we grow up. He talks about how the spiritual man is the only sane man, because he can see the smaller and the larger picture by the light of his belief, that virtue is not the absence of vice, but a "vivid and separate thing, like pain or a particular smell." He wrote a series of essays entitled, "Why I am Not a Pagan," "Why I am a Christian," "Why I am a Catholic," "Why I am an Elf," and "Why I am a Clown." He talks about the silence of the universe being not emptiness, but mercy, because if we could hear the laughter of the heavens and experience the "frantic energy of divine things" we would be knocked down "like a drunken farce." You see why I love him. His writing does get convoluted at times, and his logic often does not follow. He runs very much on emotion and humor to get his point across, and you can very easily poke holes in some of his arguments. (There is a debate between GK and GBS at the end of the book, and this is extremely apparent when juxtaposing their styles of argument). However, I don't think he cares. He feels something, and wants to tell you why he feels that way. More often than not it is just because it is beautiful or awe inspiring, not because it is logical.


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