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Think you’ve got some big fish to track this summer?

River Monsters by Jeremy Wade
c.2011, DaCapo
$26/$30 Canada
273 pages
You really need to get to the bank this week. You have a deposit to make and if it’s a good day, you’ll also make a withdrawal.

You would, in fact, go to the bank every day for the rest of your life if you could. Then again – fishing from a boat rather than the river bank might be fun, too.

If you’ve ever drowned a worm, you’ve undoubtedly got plenty of One That Got Away stories. But how will they compare to the fish you’ll read about in River Monsters by Jeremy Wade?

At somewhere around age eight, Jeremy Wade threw his first worm in the water and thought fishing was pretty okay. Later, though he had an interest in fish and a degree in zoology, he “wandered lost for several years,” working as a teacher and performing minimum-wage jobs.

And then he found a magazine article about fishing in India. He suddenly realized that his fascination with fish could pay the bills. He wrote a few articles, was discovered by a London television producer, became a TV star and eventually got his own show on Animal Planet.

In this book, Wade writes about some of the more memorable fishing expeditions he’s ever made – but these aren’t your father’s little jaunts down the creek. On his first visit to India, he became fascinated with the goonch, a fish that was said to swallow humans. Surely, at over 200 pounds, goonches were capable of doing that, but would they?

Wade learned to hold his breath and slow his oxygen consumption, and dove into the Ganges to find out.

In the Amazon, he fished for a creature with razor-sharp teeth that, even half-dead, worked “like some diabolical trimming machine.” Also in the Amazon, he was disgusted to find a fish that allowed you to go where they were, but you’d never want to “go” where they were.

Wade found vicious salt-water sharks in fresh water. He caught river stingrays that could cause painful injury to a fisherman merely by brushing against his hand. He searched U.S. backwaters for alligator gars that were once “trash fish” but are now protected. And he caught the beauty on the cover of this book, which took him 25 years to do.

Is a bad day of fishing better than a good day at work? Then you’re going to love spending a day reading River Monsters.

In the spirit of Philip Caputo and Teddy Roosevelt (the latter, he cites often), author and TV host Jeremy Wade tells stories of adventure, danger and landing dream fish in locations that few non-natives have seen. Readers will enjoy his vivid (and humorous) descriptions of lands he’s visited and risks he’s undertaken in his travels.

Wade continues the excitement by adding a little autobiography, easy-to-comprehend science, a touch of history and tales that are not a bit fishy. Fisherman or not, I think you’ll enjoy the thrills you’ll find in this book. River Monsters is easy to get hooked on – you can bank on that.

Terri Schlichenmeyer has been reading since she was three years old and never goes anywhere without a book. She lives on a hill in Wisconsin with two dogs and 11,000 books. Readers with questions or comments may write to Terri in care of this publication.

5/6/2011