Book Details
240
March 7, 2017
Width: 5 in
Height: 7 in
[Masterman’s] stories weave a rich and warmly colored tapestry of memories of landscape, place, people, and creatures both domestic and wild. [They] are personal but reach into the universal in their treatment of life’s joys, sorrows, wins, and losses, from the reminder to really live and confront challenges that was brought to him by death of two friends, to the especially tender story of how times spent fly fishing with his daughter grew into warm memories that bless them both now that she is grown. Like naturalist John Muir before him, Masterman has found that a good life demands beauty as well as bread, and he has found in nature the source of both.
The era of the classic outdoors writer isn't past — it lives on in Bruce Masterman. His work combines authentically-lived experience and a naturalist's sensitive observation with the kind of easy prose style that marks a real writer's craft. From marsh to mountaintop, with rod, gun or binoculars, at all seasons — Masterman has been there and now he takes the rest of us with him into the living wild places of our West.
Having a sense of place goes far beyond your address, demographic and the spot where you draw a pay cheque. The natural world teaches us that just like other animals we too have natural habitats, and a life rich in experience is one deeply rooted in the land, the waters, the seasons, and the rhythms of other animals. Bruce Masterman has his finger on those rhythms, that pulse, and his essays freshen the wild spirit within each of us.
Disconnect, curl up with this book, and reconnect – with your source, the natural world. Bruce Masterman casts an evocative glance back, and every sentence breathes the beauty and meaning of a life lived outdoors. For him, for those closest to him, and for you and me.
Fly fishing and daughters (and much more) bring memories of my own growing up as the daughter of a fly fisher—lowing water, flashing silver, life along rivers and on lakes. Masterman thoughtfully captures it all in these pieces from over the years he has spent in the outdoors—fishing, hunting, random wandering and celebrating nature. Sometimes funny, sometimes serious—all worth reading or re-reading on a day when the weather keeps one by the fireside.—Valerie Haig-Brown lives on the edge of Waterton Lakes National Park where she hikes often and occasionally guides wildlife and wildflower enthusiasts. She is the author of a biography of her parents, Deep Currents: Roderick and Ann Haig-Brown
Many years ago, Bruce Masterman and I fished Alberta’s Oldman River together. I had only recently taken up fly fishing, and Bruce patiently and graciously shared his angling expertise. In short order, I was catching rainbow and cutthroat trout on dry flies. Although we had been working together for a few years at the time, this was our first time fishing together. The experience served to reinforce what I already knew about Bruce through his writing: he has an enduring passion for the outdoors, and an abiding eagerness to share that passion with others. And that’s exactly what shines through in this deeply thoughtful collection of outdoor reflections.
One Last Cast is a great read and will encourage all of us to go outdoors to experience our natural world, a tonic for body and soul, as Bruce points out.
The short pieces in this volume sparkle with knowledge and insight. Best of all, they are fun to read, and interesting to think about....Through Masterman’s fine prose, readers get to join him on a tough hike up a remote ridge in the Rockies, shiver at the night sound of wolves while survival camping solo in the wilderness, and wait by a northern Manitoba railway siding in -40F temperatures, to see if a roll-of-the-dice meeting with a trapper friend comes off.
"You will emerge from the final chapter of One Last Cast with a greater appreciation for nature, wonder at its offerings and care and concern for its wellbeing."