Salmon Fishing in the Yemen

Salmon Fishing in the Yemen

3.45 of 5 stars 3.45  ·  rating details  ·  4,547 ratings  ·  790 reviews
DEBUT FICTION

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What does it take to make us believe in the impossible?

For Dr. Alfred Jones, life is a quiet mixture of civil service at the National Centre for Fisheries Excellence and marriage to Mary--an ambitious, no-nonsense financier. But a strange turn of fate from an unexpected direction forces Jones to upend his existence and spend all of his time in pur...more
Paperback, Film Tie-In Edition, 331 pages
Published April 12th 2012 by Orion Publishing Group (first published June 14th 2007)
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John
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Rose
The book got off to an interesting start, and held my attention, but I found it, ultimately, disappointing. Its biggest weakness was its lack of subtlety. For me, satire relies on an insidious subtlety that helps to separate it from outright farce. In this case, the satire would have been much more effective if it hadn't been applied so thickly. Some characters, especially Mary, never seem to be real people and are more like cartoon characters or pantomime dames - overdrawn and 2D, with their fa...more
Nigel
A light enjoyable read that is easily devoured in a few sittings. It's a quirkily impressive debut novel from a 60 year old engineer/fisherman! It is laced with humour and optimism as well as taking a satirical swipe at Yes Ministering and spin doctoring. The format of diary extracts, emails, interviews and articles is used throughout to good effect to flesh out the story and main characters who are largely sympathetically drawn, though the machinations of the the PM's Director of Communications...more
Pris robichaud

he Fisherman's Chant, Impossibility and Belief, August 23, 2007
4.5 stars

The Fisherman's chant
Rod/reel,Flask/creel, Net/fly book/, And lunch!

"Paul Torday's debut novel is about an impossibility. It is also about belief in the impossible, and belief itself. And the remarkable thing is that a book about so deeply serious a matter can make you laugh, all the way to a last twist that's as sudden and shocking as a barbed hook"
Tim MacIntosh-Smith

Jay Vent, the British prime minister, has his count...more
Bjorn
it seems this sort of humane political satires can only be written in the UK - sort of like Julian Barnes meets Douglas Adams. Or so he would probably like to be thought of.

The plot: a wealthy Yemenite sheik effectively hires the British government to help him implant salmon in the rivers of Yemen; after buying a castle in Scotland, the sheik has come to the conclusion that salmon fishing is the most relaxing and peace-bringing sport in the world, and his country could use some of that. Since Ye...more
Abzi
I didn't know this had been a book before watching the movie. On opening the book I found scenes that seemed to have been taken out of the novel and written in to the book. I like when a movie is true to the book so this made me so happy and excited to read on.
The story is told through letters, interviews and other documentation. For some this might put people off but for me it was a pleasant reminder of 'The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society' which I also enjoyed.
The character Fred...more
Graham S
The satire would have been much more effective if it hadn't been applied so thickly. Some characters, especially Mary, never seem to be real people at all, with their faults exaggerated beyond the bounds of plausibility.
No one talks like that in interviews with investigators. Some of the emails, however, were quite funny, as were some of Peter Maxwell's writings.

Parts of the book were very predictable but I didn't forsee what happened in the end, but I found it quite a flat ending. It was alm...more
Forbular
Im not trying to convince anyone that this is a great piece of classical literature some of the charactrs are steriotypes, infact most of them in truth but it was witty engaging and fun and i loved some of the things it said about the middle east as its too often protrayed as a country of sexist terrorists by the tabloids.

I loved:
The seikh (sorry i cant remember how to spell that)
Collin the gilly (reminds me of a gilly i know)
The email & diary format was fun and quirky
The absurdity
Alfre...more
Harsha Priolkar
A fascinating tale of dreams and how they can sometimes consume us but most often will set us free, if only we let them!

So we meet Dr. Jones, a gentleman academic and scientist married to an obnoxious woman (I hate to say this about any woman, even a fictional one, but she is really just awful), who is thrust headfirst into a bizarre project at the whim of a wealthy sheikh. The sheikh who is a visionary, a wise man and a keen salmon fishing enthusiast (a potent combination), dreams of seeing sal...more
Valerie Derbyshire
I got quite excited when I realised that this book was written in the epistolary style - I have a real penchant for novels that use this device. It's something you see a lot of in Victorian fiction (which I adore) but not so much in modern day stuff, so I was really looking forward to getting stuck in.

However, it was all a bit disappointing. The scientist's Dr Jones's early emails and diary entries are dull as ditch water unless you are a real salmon or fishing fan (which I'm not). The early par...more
Hilary G
I chose Salmon Fishing in the Yemen completely at random, without having any preconceived notion of what it was about. I suppose I was attracted by the word “fishing” as I am known for my interest in the (now more or less defunct) fishing industry, but this book is about angling rather than trawling, I’m not sure I was even struck by the incongruity of salmon fishing in a largely desert country before I read the book, as I know stuff all about salmon and didn’t realise they’d die if they got too...more
Erin
Salmon Fishing in the Yemen is very sweet. It’s got a light hearted plot (UK fisheries scientist is hired by a billionaire sheik to introduce salmon fishing to the Yemen), sympathetic characters and an entirely undemanding set of thematic questions. Reading is is the equivalent to drinking a hot tea after a rainy day: soothing, heart warming and altogether unexciting.

I’d not recommend Salmon Fishing because it doesn’t offer you anything fresh - the characters are all familiar, their concerns pre...more
Marina
I really liked that book, but (and maybe that's because I read it after watching the film) I have a (wee) problem with the ending. Being the rest of the novel so cynical, surely a spark of hope at the end wouldn't be too much to ask?

The format of the novel is clever and entertaining (although I enjoyed some bits more than others, of course, my favourite bits being Fred's diary), and it makes the irony of it all even more obvious. Because what Salmon Fishin in the Yemen does is to point out all (...more
Beth
I read this book for a book group and stopped half way through. I wasn't liking the book so decided to watch the movie instead. Didn't like it much either.

I found the characters and the situations they were put in rather irritating. Someone else reading the book said the characters were all very one dimensional and I agree with that assessment. Plus I just don't like the writing technique of jumping back and forth along the timeline of a story. I hate it when the author starts to tell a story an...more
Agatha
For any lover of quirky, satirical, British fiction. Could also be very appealing for readers from a completely different ilk: fishermen and/or lovers of the outdoors. A movie was made recently based upon this same book, but I have not yet seen the movie. Will look for it now that I’ve finished the book.

Main character Alfred Jones is a scientific bureaucrat in the British National Centre for Fishing Excellence and he is approached by his boss to support a wealthy Yemenese shikh who would like t...more
Jon
I saw the movie a month or so ago, and thought it was OK, mostly because of very good performances from the lead actors. I then read a review criticizing it for very heavy-handed satire, unlike the light satire of the book, which was very popular in England but never caught on the US. So I thought I'd give the book a try. As far as satire goes, the movie was at least as good as the book, which contains many pages of memos, emails, and transcripts of parliamentary proceedings, all of which pall v...more
Rebecca
I thought it was interesting to learn the story from the different perspectives of the various characters and I liked the cross-cutting effect when the reader was not aware of events that had happened until they were filled in by Dr Jones' interrogation.

I'm glad that Fred and Harriet didn't get together because that would have been of detriment to the sentimentalilty of the meaning of the Salmon Project itself (belief in the impossible) because this meaning would have been utterly overshadowed...more
Lois
This book began boringly, but finished on a relatively high note.

I had to read it for bookclub. It's not a book I would have chosen to read. I find that titles can pull me in with mystery or humour or even a key word that suggests at something exciting within.

The word in the title that I found drew me most to this book was the word "The". So not the most promising start.

Fred Jones didn't help much in the beginning. He was henpecked, somewhat arrogant - but not enough to be strong in character -...more
Emma
I have to confess that the title had put me off buying this book for many years, it's not exactly promising really is it? Well meaning friends wore me down and convinced me that because I like Life of Pi I'd like this too so in order to clear my brain of the drivel that was Fifty Shades of Grey I got stuck into this.

I realised very early on that this was not going to be an especially great book. Whilst the technical writing on the subject of fishing and salmon is undeniably accurate (read: dull)...more
Laura
This is an odd book. The premise is wonderful: a middle-aged male scientist is approached by a young-ish woman to help a Yemeni sheihk develop a salmon fishing experience for his countrymen. Add the lovely thoughts that it would be a miracle to bring this scenario to the Middle East. A miracle of science - but also a miracle of faith. I loved the main characters - genuine, well-developed, worthy of reflection. Beyond this, though, things get out-of-joint.

I think the author meant to highlight the...more
Clare Cannon
A lightly satirical novel about a rational scientist who unwillingly gets involved in an absurd fishing project at the request of the British Prime Minister. This project brings him into contact with a sheikh from Yemen whose simple, faith-inspired wisdom gradually melts the scientist's attitude.

However it is not a book to answer the questions it raises by pointing in any one direction, it only effectively stirs up thought about things which are complacently taken for granted in the western worl...more
Ally Atherton

How do you you fly ten thousand salmon over to the Yemen and how on earth are you supposed to get them to live and breed in the desert ?

Dr Alfred Jones is a fisheries scientist whose biggest achievement in life was publishing his esteemed paper 'Effects of Increased Water Acidity on the Caddis Fly Larva'. Out of the blue he is contacted by Fitzharris and Price ( Land Agents & Consultants) who are acting on behalf of a client ( A Yemeni Sheikh) who has come up with the absurd proposal to intr...more
Mal Warwick
You know this, right? Yemen, previously called “The Yemen,” lies on the fringe of the Arabian Peninsula as is best known today as a world-class producer of sand, desert heat, and political violence. Salmon are, of course, cold-water fish that are challenging to catch with a rod and reel but taste all the better once caught. So, we’re on the same page, yes?

Now consider the chances of finding a novel that adroitly mixes not just Yemen and salmon fishing but also the British Parliament, Al Qaeda, a...more
harryknuckles
I have just finished reading this book.

I was hooked from the first page! The novel concerns itself with an intelligent, hen-pecked scientist and his growing passion for what at first appears impossible and mad.

The style in which this story is presented is very interesting - using diaries, interviews, emails and letters. It intrigues me and I found that the continual change of pace and point of view dragged me more and more into the story.

Also, the correspondence between our hero (if that's wh...more
Sandra Grauschopf
Told through a series of diary entries, book excerpts, and newspaper reports, this is the story of a sheikh who wants to perform a miracle - to see salmon spawn in the mountains of Yemen, to bring together the disparate tribes of the country in a love of fishing, and to teach his countrymen patience. This despite the fact that salmon love cold, clear waters, and Yemen is a desert.

To help in this task, the sheikh brings on board Dr. Alfred Jones, a fishery scientist with no beliefs to speak of. A...more
Toeknee mabanes
I have to admit that the title of the novel did not fail to amuse me despite the myriad of available books on the shelves. Plus, I also have to add that because of its large print edition, it added charm for someone bespectacled like me. I was thinking how could someone fish salmon in an arid place like the Yemen, now, that’s what is amusing about Salmon Fishing in the Yemen by Paul Torday. I was totally absorbed that I finished the book in one day, in between preparing breakfast, cleaning my ro...more
Sean Brennan
The one pastime that has I have never been able to understand, how anybody could possibly enjoy is fishing, so when I was informed that this was to be my local book club's next book, I was a tad sceptical. In fact it is a wonderful political satire, written through a collection of diary entries, letters, reports and various other communications concerning the plan to introduce the North Atlantic Salmon to the Yemen.

This is a very British Book, with the political figures in the book constantly ch...more
Jessica
A decent story that fell short in the execution. The entire story was communicated through diary entries, emails, newspaper articles, interview transcripts and an unpublished memoir. It was an interesting concept, especially when you realise *why* it's been done. Having said that, I felt the story suffered from a lack of one clear, coherent narrative. Interview transcripts tried to stray into normal prose, and felt unnatural given that it was supposed to be a character speaking all of this. Furt...more
Readingjay
I don't know why this took so long to read. Although I enjoyed it, the structure made it too easy to put aside for quite long periods of time. I'd seen the film first so knew (or thought I knew) what the plotline would be, but as usual, the written narrative is so much better than the filmmaker's vision.

What is immensely clever about this storytelling are the multiple voices and use of a number of different text types. We have letters, emails, diaries, newspaper and journal reports (including s...more
Candice
This showed up on the list of e-books available from our library, so I thought I would give it a try, and I'm glad I did. I read most books based on reviews or recommendations and this had neither. It is a fairly humorous look at a very rich Yemeni sheik who decides that he would like to create a place in his native country where people can catch salmon and seeks help from the British government to do so. The idea is first floated to Dr. Alfred Jones, a fish expert, who states in no uncertain te...more
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“Faith is the cure that heals all troubles. Without faith there is no hope and no love. Faith comes before hope, and before love. (Sheikh Muhammad ibn Zaidi bani Tihama)” 18 people liked it
“It would be so good to settle down and become part of somewhere again, instead of constantly passing through” 7 people liked it
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