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A high mountain lake in the Colorado Rockies is the point of
departure for these stories of dark adventure, in which vividly
drawn landscapes provide an immersive setting for narratives about
coming of age, altered states, moral slippage, romantic love,
sexual jealousy, and impenetrable loneliness. Fishing guides,
amateur sportsmen, teenage misfits, scientists, mountaineers, and
expatriates embark on disquieting journeys of self-discovery in
far-flung places: the hazardous tidal waters of Nantucket, the
granite quarries and ski slopes of New Hampshire, Venezuela's
Orinoco basin, the ancient squares and alleyways of Rome and
Granada, the summit of an Andean volcano, and the tension-filled
streets of eastern Cuba. Classic in feel and fresh in approach, the
stories in A FIELD GUIDE TO MURDER AND FLY FISHING speak to the
inextricability of exterior and interior experience; to the
powerful magnetism of solitude versus friendship, brotherhood, and
love; and to the urgent need for a more direct engagement with the
planet that sustains us. Â A FIELD GUIDE TO MURDER AND FLY
FISHING has been shortlisted for the New Rivers Press Many Voices
Project, the Autumn House Press Fiction Prize, and the Lewis-Clark
Press Discovery Award. Stories in the collection have appeared in
Colorado Review, Gulf Coast, Saranac Review, and many other
literary magazines, reviews, and anthologies. "The Afternoon
Client" won the 2013 Writer's Digest Popular Fiction Awards, and
"Tower Eight" was the Grand Prize winner for Outrider Press's The
Mountain anthology. Other stories have been nominated for the
Pushcart and Best of the Net anthologies and shortlisted for the
Tucson Festival of Books Literary Awards, the Lightship
International Literature Prize, the Glimmer Train Short Story Award
for New Writers, the Rick DeMarinis Short Fiction Award, the
Alligator Juniper Award for Short Fiction, and the Richard Yates
Short Story Awards.
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