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Body of Water: A Sage, a Seeker, and the World's Most Alluring Fish Paperback – Aug. 25 2017
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Chris Dombrowski was playing a numbers game: two passions—poetry and fly-fishing; two children, one of them in utero; and an income hovering perilously close to zero. Enter, at this particularly challenging moment, a miraculous email: can’t go, it’s all paid for, just book a flight to Miami.
Thus began a journey that would lead to the Bahamas and to David Pinder, a legendary bonefishing guide. Bonefish are prized for their elusiveness and their tenacity. And no one was better at hunting them than Pinder, a Bahamian whose accuracy and patience were virtuosic. He knows what the fish think, said one fisherman, before they think it.
By the time Dombrowski meets Pinder, however, he has been abandoned by the industry he helped build. With cataracts from a lifetime of staring at the water and a tiny severance package after forty years of service, he watches as the world of his beloved bonefish is degraded by tourists he himself did so much to attract. But as Pinder’s stories unfold, Dombrowski discovers a profound integrity and wisdom in the guide’s life.
- Print length232 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherMilkweed Editions
- Publication dateAug. 25 2017
- Dimensions13.97 x 2.03 x 21.08 cm
- ISBN-101571313648
- ISBN-13978-1571313645
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Review
Praise for Body of Water
"A wonderful, restless memoir. ... Wistful but muscular, Body of Water is a thrilling escape and a fascinating account of the evolution of the flats, the habits of bonefish and the story of how the saltwater side of the sport came to be."—The Wall Street Journal, "Five Best: Books on Angling"
“A brilliant book. Destined to be a classic.”—Jim Harrison
“Dombrowski’s writing exhibits a poetic sense of economy. There’s a tremendous amount of information here on the geological, botanical, biological and human history of the region, but the author uses only what’s necessary to the story and relates it in evocative, concise language that reminded me of Gary Snyder one minute and John McPhee the next. . . . Dombrowski’s exacting descriptions of the sport make me long to try it again—and to wish that more fishing books were written by poets.”—Wall Street Journal
“Dombrowski elevates the fly-fishing-as-meditation narrative by the sheer fact that he’s so damn good at writing about it. There’s prose and practicality in equal parts, so the allure of the sport comes through.”—Oܳٲ
“Body of Water is about bonefishing, but it is also about ecosystem exploitation, class conflict, wealth inequity, race relations, Bahamian history, mentor-mentee relationships, nature as the catalyst for self-awareness, and more. . . . The lyrical narrative strikes a delicate balance between reflective memoir and reportage.”—Minneapolis Star Tribune
“If truth is a tailing bonefish, then Chris Dombrowski has taken full measure of the truth. WithBody of Water, the author gives us a superbly cast work of nonfiction that deserves a wide readership. . . Entwined with mesmerizing angling scenes are the author’s carefully-wrought ruminations on the deep, tectonic forces of nature and the treacherous history of colonialism—all in prose honed sharp as the edge of a knife, quick-witted, unpretentious but deeply reflective. . . He brings precision and originality to his sparkling depiction of flats fishing in sentences that would make Tom McGuane lean back in the batter’s box.”—Gray's Sporting Journal
“A lyrical, genre-defying tribute. Drawing on Caribbean history and the evolution of fly-fishing, Dombrowski’s foray into nonfiction proves thematically complex, finely wrought, and profoundly life-affirming.”—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“This gorgeous work wastes not a word on fly-fishing basics. It dives Moby-Dick deep into a famed sport and livelihood's very essence, and never leaves. In the hands of veteran trout guide and poet Dombrowski, the ‘Abraham’ of Caribbean guides, David Pinder Sr., becomes the perfect embodiment of the near mystery religion that is saltwater-flats fishing. Via the hearts of two men utterly in love with the wounded world in which their calling takes place,Body of Waterthen pours forth beauties, subtleties, dark history, and insight with an unforced lyrical power I associate with no lesser word than ‘masterpiece.’ Dombrowski’s Michigan-to-Montana trajectory updates Jim Harrison, his comedic fishing scenes bear comparison to Thomas McGuane, and his powers of ebullient reflection bring to mind Mary Oliver—yet I’ve read no book anything like Body of Water, and enjoyed no book in memory more.”—David James Duncan, author of The River Why
“This is some of the best writing that you’ll ever read about fishing. ButBody of Waterachieves even more—it’s a passionate, luminous, completely delightful book.”—Ian Frazier, author of Travels in Siberia
“Rarely do cautionary tales dazzle like this. It’s a credit to Dombrowski’s prose, which torques and twists and glistens into view much like the bonefish itself. . . . This is a book about seeking that which we cannot see, of understanding a place and its people not nearly as foreign as we might imagine. It’s a book about what connects us, and a book about disconnection, too. Though most importantly, it’s a meditation, not only on the ebb and flow of our lives, but on the lives with which we share this planet. By book’s end, Dombrowksi leaves readers with many lessons, though this one most of all: whether on a skiff or in a book, the guide matters. And Dombrowski’s the one you want.”—Los Angeles Review
“Dombrowski makes the East End of Grand Bahama Island rise right up out of green water and live on the printed page. But his lasting achievement is in giving an old forgotten man of the sea named David Pinder his beautiful bonefishing due.”—Paul Hendrickson, author of Hemingway’s Boat
“Dombrowski has fetched up a marvel. So very much is in it—geology, biology, fishing lore; conservation and natural history and personal quest—all seen by a wondrously limber mind traversing space and time. I don’t fish but this scarcely matters—Body of Water is about being alive. An abundant and reverential feast of a book.”—Noy Holland, author of Bird
“Body of Waterhits you in two ways. The first is obvious—this is a book about fish and fishing from a writer who’s put in the time to know what he’s talking about. But the second takes you by surprise: at its core, Body of Water is about our increasingly tenuous connection to nature, from a poet who understands the source of that strange and melancholic joy that we are blessed with only when we stand in wild places.”—Steven Rinella, author of Meat Eater
“Uncanny and moving. This book will not only make you change your vacation plans, it might make you change your life. A reverent, almost holy book, of angling lore.”—Debra Magpie Earling, author of Perma Red
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Milkweed Editions
- Publication date : Aug. 25 2017
- Edition : Reprint
- Language : English
- Print length : 232 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1571313648
- ISBN-13 : 978-1571313645
- Item weight : 295 g
- Dimensions : 13.97 x 2.03 x 21.08 cm
- 鶹 Rank: #1,070,200 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #10 in Bahamas Travel Guides
- #227 in Environmentalist & Naturalist Biographies & Memoirs
- #270 in Fishing
- Customer Reviews:
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Customer reviews
Top reviews from Canada
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- Reviewed in Canada on April 19, 2025Verified PurchaseFantastic story about the ocean, bonefish, and special fishing guide.
The story takes place on the remotest tip of the Grand Bahamas
Top reviews from other countries
- Jack R RidlReviewed in the United States on May 26, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars A World Worth Saving
Verified PurchaseYes, Chris Dombrowski has written one of the five finest books that focuses on fishing. And it guides us to realizations we likely would otherwise not receive. And talk about a writer! For those who read the writing asd well as the written about, this is for you. It's about fishing, or is it? Dombrowski, one of the most sought after fishing guides in the country is also as a writer another kind of guide. Read and see where you get to go.
- Dean KuipersReviewed in the United States on December 26, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars In Pursuit of the Divine
Verified PurchaseDombrowski has worked some magic here, writing not just an expert nonfiction book about fishing and fishing guides, but a kind of incantation about guiding itself, about why local experts matter, about what it is, exactly, that they know about fish and about us. The subject of Body of Water is a legendary Bahamian guide named David Pinder, a religious man who has made a life taking other people out on the shallow flats off Grand Bahama in pursuit of bonefish, a large and elusive silvery gamefish considered a true test of fly-fishing skill. Over what seems like years of contact, Dombrowski peels open Pinder’s deep humility and his love for the ocean and its residents, a shocking, refreshing respect that has made him the guide’s guide, passing down his decades of quiet expertise to his many kids and relations, many of whom are also preachers, and even a bit to the author himself.
Dombrowski is both a guide and a poet, and his descriptions of the ever-changing water and the fish themselves are transporting. But some of my other favorite parts are when he probes the politics of Pinder being a black guide to a club of rich, white “sports,” when he explores his faith, and when he confronts the conflict between the economic boon of bonefish, tarpon and permit fishing and the upscale development which is killing the mangroves and thus the fish, too. As is so often the case, the fishermen are those who end up determined to save the fish.
“To hunt anything – game animals, morels, antler sheds, huckleberries – is to abjure commonplace diversions and dedicate oneself to the occupation of being creaturely,” Dombrowski writes. Since bonefishing is mostly catch-and-release (not that many rich people will eat them), the real pursuit is just to be in their presence. “Perhaps the heart of bonefishing is ecstatic, more like prayer,” he writes, “which makes the elusive fish a grace we intuit or perhaps even glimpse at the verge of sight, then probe toward via the faith we place in the cast.”
He’s not fishing for food; he’s fishing for reassurance that he and the divine both belong to this earth. And that’s a hunt I want to go on every single time.
- beth boothReviewed in the United States on December 26, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars A modern River Runs Through It
Verified PurchaseWhen people ask me why I love to fly fish so much, I always stumble to answer. What eventually comes out of my mouth is something along the lines of “it’s about so much more than catching fish.” Like fly fishing itself, the point of Body of Water is catching fish, but it’s about so much more than that.
Body of Water is an exploration on wealth disparity. A commentary on the lasting effects of imperialism. Specific insight into the difficulties a community faces when their economy is based on tourism. The book puts you in the mind of a virtuoso fishing guide—a true living legend in the world of bonefishing.
That substance of Body of Water got me to read it the first time. The form is what got me to come back the second. Chris Dombrowski has my dream job. He’s a professor in the off-season and a fly fishing guide in the warm months. As a professor in the classroom, he teaches about poetry; as a guide on the water, he demonstrates it. There isn’t another person on Earth more qualified to write about the art of fly fishing. He writes about fly fishing the way Bourdain wrote about cooking—the way only an expert in substance and form can.
If you’ve ever smiled recalling a memory on the water, or felt your stomach drop when a big fish broke your line, this book is for you. If you’ve never held a rod in your hand, but you appreciate excellent prose or learning about something new, this book is for you. I think everyone falls into at least one of those categories, so I recommend this book to everyone I meet.
- Jeff BrooksReviewed in the United States on February 13, 2022
5.0 out of 5 stars Filled an impossibly large gap—
Verified PurchaseHaving just finished Middleton’s, The Earth is Enough, I knew it would be exceedingly difficult and probably impossible to read anything up to par with Middleton’s masterpiece. The gap was too wide to fill. I went to my bookshelves of fly fishing tomes in search of something to pass the long winter evenings. I wanted something fresh and new that I hadn’t previously read. I came across Chris’ book, Body of Water, and sat down to see what it’s made of—
Sixty-seven pages later I came up for air having been immersed in writing equal to that of Middleton, a sense of poetic flare, story telling that left me aching for more, and the use of language that assuaged the gap I felt deep within. Chris Dombrowski will move to my top-shelf of best fly fishing writers. What a happy discovery. Well done Chris. I hope my note of congratulations finds it way to you sir!
- someguyReviewed in the United States on September 10, 2023
3.0 out of 5 stars Tedious
Verified PurchaseIt may be because my personal preference in reading material is by authors who write in a clean and uncluttered fashion, but Dombrowski lays the metaphors and superlatives on far too thick. Being a relatively short book in terms of page count, the story doesn’t have a chance to move along much because every passage seems much longer than it needs to be, bogged down by he author piling multiple metaphors and superlatives into every description of a scene, person, fish or object. ClAs reverend Maclean tells young Tom in A River Runs Through It “Again, half as long”