Globe Pequot / Stackpole Books
Pages: 184
Trim: 6⅜ x 9⅜
978-0-8117-3937-5 • Hardback • December 2020 • $24.95 • (£18.95)
978-0-8117-6932-7 • eBook • December 2020 • $23.50 • (£17.95)
Mitch Keller has worked as a reporter or editor for five daily newspapers in five states. He spent the last seventeen years of his newspaper life at the New York Times, where he was desk head and then managing editor of the New York Times News Service and wrote for the City section.His work has also appeared in Newsday, Outdoor America magazine, the Woodstock (N.Y.) Times, and the collection More New York Stories: The Best of the City Section of The New York Times (New York University Press, 2010). He divides his time between New York City and the Catskill Mountains.
East Branch is the fulfillment of a dream that many anglers want to realize but most will not pursue. It’s a recounting of leaving one life to search for a better one—one that coexists with trout waters and trout towns. Few anglers, even the most passionate, will ever take this leap and discover what lies on the other side. But Mitch Keller’s eloquent prose and honest storytelling takes you there with him: to the beautiful trout, rivers, aquatic insects, and animals sharing equal footing with the harsh climate and financial headwinds that identify and define many who persist in New York’s Catskill Mountain trout country. It’s a journey worth sharing.— Paul Weamer, author of Guide to Upper Delaware River, Pocketguide to New York Hatches, Pocketguide to Pennsylvania Hatches, and The Bug Book
Mitch Keller’s book is a heartwarming yet intriguing story of how a fly angler traded the comforts of city life for one on a Catskill trout stream. Despite the challenges and financial uncertainties he faced living for several years tucked away in the mountains, Keller emerged from his experience with more than simply netting trout—a perspective of life itself.— Mike Valla, Catskill fly angler and author of several fly fishing books
It was enjoyable to learn the etymology of towns and landmarks in the Catskills that are so familiar. The deeply personal saga was fascinating, and the exhilaration felt at the beginning of snowmelt is tangible. East Branch is an interesting, informative and satisfying read.
— Judy Van Put, fishing columnist, Sullivan County Democrat