What do you think?
Rate this book


273 pages, Paperback
First published March 17, 2005
The world's record largemouth bass was set in 1932 when a poor Georgia farmer named George Perry brought home a 22 pound 4 ounce largemouth from a day of fishing. He mailed in the fish's measurements in response to a contest sponsored by Field and Stream magazine, and his family promptly ate the fish! Field & Stream shortly thereafter credited Perry's fish as the world record.
Despite the hundreds of thousands of hours which lunker bass fishermen have spent fishing (millions, maybe?) while trying to best George Perry's record fish, no one has ever topped Perry's record.
It is expected that whoever catches the new record will be reeling in a fish worth millions of dollars to the lucky fisherman from endorsements and sponsorships from fishing tackle and boat manufacturers.
Monte Burke's book explores the personalities (which feature several prominent bass fishermen) and the locations which are believed to be the waters from which the next world-record sized fish could be caught (Florida, Southern California, Texas, or Cuba).
This book is a superb introduction into this odd little subculture.
My rating: 7.25/10, finished 4/13/20 (3437). I purchased a used HB copy in like-new condition from McKay's books on 3/1/20 for $1.50.
HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH