If you're a fly fisherman, I highly recommend that you acquire and read this book. This is not a "how to" book. It doesn't teach you how to fly fish for trout, salmon, steelhead, or other fish species. This books walks you through the history of our sport--the use of a long rod, lines, and carefully crafted flies intended to imitate what fish eat in the wild. This is a rich and interesting history, and Ian Whitlaw recounts this chronological story using fifty flies to describe the advances in the sport over the centuries. Each chapter focuses on a single fly and describes the state of the sport, important people, and why this particularl fly was developed and why it was important in its time, and with some why they're still important to this day.
This is the kind of book that you can pick up in the dead of winter and browse over a hot cup of tea, and reaquaint yourself with the rich history of this sport that many of us love so very much--that of going out into nature and trying to convince a wily trout to take an artificial imitation.
Just to be clear, I am a trout conservationist and strongly believe in protecting and effectively managing this beautiful natural resource for generations to come. I don't eat trout, and I carefully catch and release my fish, and use barbless hooks when I can. I am involved in efforts to protect water quantity and quality in watersheds across the western U.S. I grew up in Montana and had a fly rod in my hands from the age of eight years old on, fly fishing has always been an important part of my life, and the history of this wonderful sport is equally important to me. 4/5 stars for me.