More than a collection of fishing stories, A Place on the Water is a passionate and eloquent exploration of subjects with broad appeal: love of land and water, informed and unsentimental appreciation of nature, and outrage at changes that threaten to obliterate places we can no longer afford to take for granted. In clear and sparkling prose, Jerry Dennis transports us to a world that every angler dreams of-where the very next cast will be the one that hooks something enormous and wonderful.
Jerry Dennis was born in Flint in 1954, and grew up in rural northern Michigan. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree in English from the University of Louisville in 1981, after attending Northern Michigan University and Northwestern Michigan College.
As he began his writing career, he worked as a carpenter for five years. To date, he has written for many publications. Journalistic assignments sent him to Iceland, Chile, and extensively throughout the U.S. and Canada.
Dennis married during this time to Gail. They currently live on the shores of Lake Michigan, not far from Traverse City.
Since 2000 he has been on the faculty of the University of Michigan's Bear River Writers Conference, where he teaches creative non-fiction and nature writing.
As of 2014, he is the author of ten books, his best known book is The Living Great Lakes, about his trip around the great lakes in a rickety ship. He was awarded a place on the Michigan Notable Books list for that book.
In 2014, in response to a pricing dispute between his publisher, MacMillan Press, and Amazon, Dennis set up his own publishing house, Big Maple Press, to produce books which will be sold only through independent booksellers.
His awards include: 2004 Michigan Notable Books, 2004 Sigurd Olsen Nature Writing Award, 2004 Great Lakes Culture Best Book Award Non-Fiction, 2004 The Stuart D. and Vernice M. Gross Award for Literature, 2003 Alumni Fellows Award, University of Louisville, College of Arts and Sciences, 1999 Michigan Author of the Year, 1993, 1996, 1998, and 2003 Best Book of the Year awarded by Outdoor Writers Association of America.
A wonderful series of short stories about a man's fishing experiences in the Upper Peninsula of northern Michigan. The hunts, challenges, failures, and wonderful catches of native fish in the region are explained in very readable and beautifully written prose. A very good read.
Another wonderful collection of stories and observations by Jerry Dennis. Many of them are about fishing, but there are also several that just touch on the outdoors and nature in general and some that are just about canoeing. I really enjoy his writing, I didn’t like this collection quite as much as From a Wooden Canoe but there are still many enjoyable reads - some poignant, some comical, many a mixture of both, in this book.
Basically from this book I have learned that if you live in northern Michigan, you love to fish. And that principle may shape most of your life and many beliefs. It may be a significant and noble bond to the environment, the seasons, your community, and the food supply. It may fuel a lifetime of nostalgia and good feelings. If you’re looking for variety outside of that, you might not find much.
It's been noted that some of the best fishing is done while reading. This old book by Jerry Dennis, illustrations by Glenn Wolff, easily carries the weight of that statement. A life spent fishing produces a list of memories from youth through middle age, marriage and fatherhood for our author. Share his joy in the natural wonders of the UP. Read closely, there are very broad hints at fishing holes that remain productive for those naturally reproducing brook trout pursued today as vigorously as in the past.