cover image Joe and Me: An Education in Fishing and Friendship

Joe and Me: An Education in Fishing and Friendship

James Prosek. William Morrow & Company, $23 (200pp) ISBN 978-0-688-15316-8

Prosek, now a senior at Yale, gained a reputation as a naturalist when in 1996 at age 20, he published Trout: An Illustrated History. In this memoir, which is accompanied by his watercolors, he recounts the experiences he had as a teenager after he was caught fishing without a permit in a Connecticut reservoir by game warden Joe Haines. Instead of sending the boy to juvenile court, Haines decided to show Prosek that one can catch just as many fish in legal waters. The two were soon fishing and hunting together, and Haines was teaching his young friend about nature and such practical matters as how to kill and butcher a bull, how to make lead fishing weights and how to dig for mussels and clams. Prosek's eagerness to learn from Joe is engaging, especially when he thinks about what he wishes for his education and realizes that Joe, with no formal instruction beyond high school, can gain wisdom simply by observing the world. Although Prosek's impressionistic watercolors are appealing, his graceless prose and wooden dialogue hamper his attempt to portray Joe as memorable. (June)