Casting Onward
Fishing Adventures in Search of America's Native Gamefish
by Steve Ramirez
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Pub Date May 01 2022 | Archive Date May 02 2022
Rowman & Littlefield | Lyons Press
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Description
In writing this book, author, naturalist, and educator Steve Ramirez traveled thousands of miles by plane, motor vehicle, boat, and foot. Each chapter includes his fishing with a notable person in the worlds of fishing and conservation. His fishing partners in this book include Bob White, Chris Wood, Kirk Deeter (and many other leaders within Trout Unlimited), Ted Williams of The Native Fish Coalition, Matthew Miller, and John Karges of The Nature Conservancy, and many more.
In the course of this journey, Ramirez explores and fishes mountain streams, alpine lakes, National Wild and Scenic Rivers, desert canyons, brackish water estuaries, and the rolling ocean off the coast of Cape Cod. About half of this book was written while traveling through the COVID-19 pandemic and it touches on the lessons that COVID can teach us about nature and human nature.
In Casting Onward, the author expands beyond the geographical scope of Casting Forward by fishing for native fish within their original habitats across American. Each story is told in part through the eyes of the people who have lived alongside and come to love, these waters and fish. Woven throughout these adventures are the stories of the people he meets and befriends while pursuing a mutual love of nature and the best of human nature, as the first criterion for finding common ground.
This is a hopeful story, in an all-too-often seemingly hopeless time. It is a story of fishing and friendship. It is a story of humanity’s impact on nature, and nature’s impact on humanity.
Steve Ramirez is a writer, educator, master naturalist, philosopher, and outdoor adventurer who lives and writes in the Texas Hill Country. He has lived in and traveled across four continents chronicling the unique historical landscapes, human cultures, and natural worlds that are in danger of vanishing.
Steve’s stories have been published in various magazines and journals, including but not limited to: Trout, Under Wild Skies, Explore, Texas Sporting Journal, Texas Trophy Hunters, The Houston Literary Review, Cutthroat: Journal of the Arts, and The Pecan Grove Review. He is an avid fly-fisher, hiker, naturalist, hunter, and outdoor educator who lives in a house in the hills, surrounded by trees, in Boerne, Texas.
Advance Praise
“With Casting Onward, Steve Ramirez has crafted a beautiful meditation on the natural world and our relationship to it. Though Steve describes the various perils of neglecting either, he is, like all anglers, an optimist. By the time you reach the end of this splendid, heartfelt book, you’ll be one, too.”
- Monte Burke, author of Lords of the Fly and Saban
"Simply, a book about fish species to be forever cherished from a writer to be revered. Casting Onward deserves a prominent place on every angler's bookshelf."
- Gerry Bethge, Deputy Editor, Field & Stream and Outdoor Life
"It is a book about fishing, but on a much more important level, it is about us, our relationship with one-another, and our relationship with the lands and waters that sustain the planet."
- Chris Wood, President/CEO, Trout Unlimited
“For Steve Ramirez, the presence or absence of native fish is a metric by which to measure the wholeness of a landscape. After reading this book, your presence or absence in the fight for wild waters and wild fish may well be the metric by which you evaluate your own connection to the natural world.”
- T. Edward Nickens, author of The Last Wild Road: Adventure and Essays from a Sporting Life
“I wish there were more anglers, writers, and Americans like Steve Ramirez. He understands what most don’t -- that fish are wildlife, too. And he understands that our remnant native fish -- genetically undefiled by aliens flung confetti-like around the waterscape in the age of ecological illiteracy -- are national treasures. This book contains some of the finest angling writing I’ve seen. But it’s not just for anglers. It’s for all who delight in wild things, wild land, and wild water.”
- Ted Williams, National Chair, Native Fish Coalition
“Ramirez is your knowledgeable cross-country guide who cracks a joke or two while he introduces you to a place, makes you love it, and (now that you love it) advises you on how to care for it. An evocative big-hearted book, highly recommended.”
- Tim Cahill, author of Jaguars Ripped My Flesh
"Steve Ramirez is a man with a mission. He challenges us to be our best selves and recognize we are all in the same boat, whether fish, birds, wolves, or humans.
Our defense against the storm surge of destructive human activities that will drown us is to recognize we are one. Beautifully crafted, Casting Onward teaches us this lesson."
- Lillian Stokes, co-author, Stokes Field Guide to the Birds of North America
“In an era of social media ‘influencers’ and pan-flashed digital commentary on fly fishing, it’s easy for anglers to lose context… even hope. Thank God Steve Ramirez is willing and able to give us some real, hard-earned, and eloquent words on “why” we all care to flyfish in the first place. His prose is sharp, honest, and deeply meaningful. Casting Onward reinforces the spirit and soul of angling, and it underscores the importance of community, place and species in ways that has seldom been touched with such respect and eloquence.”
- Kirk Deeter, Editor-in-Chief, Trout Unlimited/Trout Magazine
“Faced with a pandemic and a world gone mad, Steve Ramirez follows the time-honored tradition of taking to the wild. But his is no voice crying alone in the wilderness. Ramirez knows if we’re ever to get out of our current mess, we need each other. This is a lyrical, funny, and frequently moving account of what matters in a life well lived: friendship and fishing and wild places among them.”
- Matthew L. Miller, author of Fishing Through the Apocalypse
“Casting Onward is nothing if not a conversation—with native fish, with nature, and with the people who love and fight for both. Steve Ramirez asks numerous important questions in that conversation, but more importantly he has the unique—and increasingly rare—gift of listening wholeheartedly to the answers. Pull up a chair, it’s a conversation you don’t want to miss.”
- Jason Rolfe, Editor of The Flyfish Journal
“This is a book about many important things—friendships, love, humor, and the joys of living—and fishing too! Cast your fly into the circle of life—connect with nature, live in the moment, change the future. I couldn’t close the cover until I finished it.”
- Randall Kaufmann, author of Bonefishing: Fly Fishing the Flats for Bonefish, Permit, Tarpon, and Trevally
“You open this book expecting to connect with fish, but what you don’t expect is even better. Steve offers readers an authentic experience with every character in every chapter. You feel everything but idle when you spend time with these pages.”
- Kris Millgate, author of My Place Among Fish and My Place Among Men
Available Editions
EDITION | Hardcover |
ISBN | 9781493062294 |
PRICE | $27.95 (USD) |
Featured Reviews
Casting Onward is the second book of fishing stories by Steve Ramirez. Due out 1st May from Rowman & Littlefield on their Lyons Press imprint, it's 320 pages and will be available in hardcover and ebook formats.
This is not a "how-to" tutorial guide. There are no maps or directions to recommended fishing areas, and no photographs. What it does include is a warm and conversational bunch of essays about specific game fish in the USA and the author's experiences with them, and with the outdoors people who care about and fish them. The author is quite gifted at conveying a sense of calm and meditative respect for the sport of fly fishing. I grew up with fishermen and have always enjoyed camping and outdoor pursuits. They fished, I read (or foraged, or took photographs). Reading this book reminded me a lot of my younger days. There is quite a lot of history interspersed in the stories: mental attitude, fishermen/women, fish, locations, human interaction, and the bigger philosophical life questions. I wasn't expecting to be as engaged in the read as I was.
The illustrations, which are simple charcoal and graphite sketches, really added a lot to the book. This would make a superlative gift to a fisherman, library acquisition, or for the home library. Highly recommended to fans of nature/sport writers, naturists such as Thomas McGuane and/or Norman Maclean. There are no photographs in this edition, except the covers.
The book also includes a short bibliography for further reading.
Five stars. Beautifully written.
Disclosure: I received an ARC at no cost from the author/publisher for review purposes.
This is the second book of Ramirez's that I have had the pleasure of reading. He has a way of making you feel like you are alongside him as he fishes many different areas. Not only alongside him, but seeing through his eyes the sights he sees, the friends he is interacting with, and the experiences he has. Truly a rare thing in today's mass produced books!
For this book, the author travels to find native fish. Many may be only a few inches long, but they are the true survivors in today's shrinking world. His descriptions are wonderful.
To me, where the book really shines though, is in his writing about his friends. Absolutely the same feelings I have when I am fishing with buddies, but unfortunately I cannot express the emotions nearly as well as he.
Let me give a few examples.
"The best part of any adventure is often the anticipation".
" The fishing was wonderful, the catching was great, but the sharing of this river and these times with my friends was the best thing. It always is. I slept well that night".
And on and on. There is just so much wisdom and joy written into this book!
I am going to hold on to this one and reread it many times in the future. And I will be buying copies for my fishing friends!
Thanks to NetGalley for allowing me the privilege of reading and reviewing an ARC of this book.
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