Trout Fishing in America

Trout Fishing in America is a novella written by Richard Brautigan and published in 1967. It is technically Brautigan's first novel; he wrote it in 1961 before A Confederate General from Big Sur, which was published first.

Trout Fishing in America
First edition
AuthorRichard Brautigan
Cover artistErik Weber
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreNovella, Prose poem
PublisherFour Seasons Foundation
Publication date
October 12, 1967
Media typePrint (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages112
ISBN0-385-28860-3 (hardback edition) & ISBN 0-395-50076-1 (paperback edition)
OCLC232945520
Preceded byA Confederate General from Big Sur 
Followed byIn Watermelon Sugar 

Overview

Trout Fishing In America is an abstract book without a clear central storyline. Instead, the book contains a series of anecdotes broken into chapters, with the same characters often reappearing from story to story. The settings of most of the chapters occur in three locales: Brautigan's childhood in the Pacific Northwest of the U.S.; his day-to-day adult life in San Francisco; and a camping trip in Idaho with his wife and infant daughter during the summer of 1961. Most of the chapters were written during this trip.[1][2] An excerpt appeared as the lead piece in the Evergreen Review, Volume 7, No. 31 (Oct.–Nov. 1963).

The phrase "Trout Fishing in America" is used in various ways: it is the title of the book, a character, a hotel, the act of fishing itself, a modifier (one character is named "Trout Fishing in America Shorty") and other things. Brautigan uses the theme of trout fishing as a point of departure for thinly veiled and often comical critiques of mainstream American society and culture. Several symbolic objects, such as a mayonnaise jar, a Ben Franklin statue in San Francisco's Washington Square and trout, reappear throughout the book.

The cover of the book is a photograph of Brautigan and a friend identified as Michaela Le Grand, whom he referred to as his "Muse." The photo was taken by Erik Weber, in San Francisco's Washington Square Park in front of the Benjamin Franklin statue. The first chapter of the book is an extended and fanciful description of this photo.

Arion Press published a deluxe edition of Trout Fishing in America in 2003, with a preface by Ron Loewinsohn, and a color lithograph in half the edition by Wayne Thiebaud.

Cultural influence

Apollo 17 astronaut Jack Schmitt named a crater explored in the Taurus-Littrow valley on the Moon "Shorty", after the character in the book.[3]

In March 1994, a teenager named Peter Eastman Jr. from Carpinteria, California legally changed his name to "Trout Fishing in America".[4] At around the same time, National Public Radio reported on a young couple who had named their baby "Trout Fishing in America".[5]

There is a band named "Trout Fishing in America".

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.