"Chimney Pond Tales" by Beth Harmon and Jane Thomas (illustrator), is a posthumous collection of the stories of Leroy Dudley—early 20th century mountain guide to celebrities, artists, scientists and lovers of the out-of-doors—who lived his life in the shadow of Maine’s Mount Katahdin. A popular spinner of out-sized tales (most centering on his hard-won friendship with the mythic Pamola, the Penobscot Indian god of thunder tasked with protecting the mountain), Roy came to be sought out as much for his humor and Will Rogers-like delivery as his skill as a guide.
Dudley’s many yarns, re-crafted by Harmon with wry and obvious affection and graced with Thomas’s whimsical illustrations, speak to a life that was rich and successful in the ways that truly matter—in the lives he touched with his stories and his deeply-felt connection to the natural world. Harmon’s narrative sings with the sights and sounds of Mount Katahdin, imbuing Roy’s stories with an authorial voice rich with Down East vernacular and subtle social commentary. This is storytelling at its very best.