John N. Maclean
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Fire on the Mountain Fire and Ashes The Thirtymile Fire The Esperanza Fire River of Fire
New BookAboutLatest NewsEvents Other Books Fire on the Mountain Fire and Ashes The Thirtymile Fire The Esperanza Fire River of Fire GalleriesWritingsContact
John N. Maclean
Author • Journalist

Wood engravings in “Home Waters” by W. Wesley Bates

“‘Home Waters’ began as a fish story, but as it developed into a book it wound up dealing with many of the same people, places and events as ‘A River Runs Through It.’ One element of ‘Home Waters’ that consciously imitated ‘A River’, however, is the set of wood engravings that mark each section, just as wood engravings appear ‘A River.’ By chance, at the same time I was working on ‘Home Waters’ I located Robert Williams, who created the illustrations for ‘A River’ back in the 1970s. I was digging up information for another writer, Henry Hughes, who was researching the illustrations for my dad’s book.

Nearly a half century had passed, but I found Williams, who had retired from the University of Chicago Press, where he’d been a designer and illustrator, living in retirement in Hyde Park, the U of C neighborhood. He was able to answer a lot of questions, including confirming that the image on the cover of the first edition of ‘A River,’ of a river running up against a high bluff, came from his imagination, and is not an actual location. Williams’s engravings are wonderfully evocative, and I suggested to my editor, Peter Hubbard, that we do the same thing for ‘Home Waters.’ Peter agreed and found Wesley W. Bates, who gave it the right touch.”
— John N. Maclean
A Croonenberghs-tied wet fly.
A Croonenberghs-tied wet fly.

A Croonenberghs-tied wet fly.

One of “the generals,” a quill pattern fly tied by George Croonenberghs that was the staple of every Maclean fly box.

A giant Blackfoot River rainbow trout

A giant Blackfoot River rainbow trout

The size and heft of the rainbow necessary to be the fish of a lifetime grew longer and got heavier as I grew older.

A Croonenberghs-tied wet fly.

A Croonenberghs-tied wet fly.

Another of “the generals,” a quill pattern fly tied by George Croonenberghs that was the staple of every Maclean fly box.

Prologue: How it began

Prologue: How it began

The three figures could be the Reverend Maclean, the tall figure in front, with George Croonenberghs behind him carrying his basket, and Norman Maclean downriver.

Paul! Paul!

Paul! Paul!

He would come down to the lake in the evening when I was there, waiting for a fish to rise, and call out, Paul! Paul!, his face alive with memory.

Time to go fishing

Time to go fishing

Mornings mostly were for work including writing, but then it was time to go fishing.

The thousand-year old western larch near Seeley Lake

The thousand-year old western larch near Seeley Lake

Called “Gus” by Seeley Lakers, this tree has seen a thousand years of human history go by.

First Presbyterian Church, Missoula

First Presbyterian Church, Missoula

The church the Reverend Maclean planned and his friend A.J. Gibson designed.

chapEpilogue_001_9780062944597_1_WB_SS_1200.png
Cowboys and cattle in camp

Cowboys and cattle in camp

He wore leather chaps, a red bandana, and most impressive to young male eyes—a scabbard with the rifle sticking out of it!

Fire on the mountain

Fire on the mountain

The Mann Gulch Fire of 1949 and the South Canyon Fire of 1994 bore many similarities—blowups that caught fire crews on the too-steep sides of a gulch.

Morrell Lake

Morrell Lake

He waved from the shore as I caught a fish and my son put it in the basket.

Epilogue

Epilogue

The story of the book—the three figures in Epilogue are now down to one, the author, fishing alone in home waters.

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A Croonenberghs-tied wet fly.
A giant Blackfoot River rainbow trout
A Croonenberghs-tied wet fly.
Prologue: How it began
Paul! Paul!
Time to go fishing
The thousand-year old western larch near Seeley Lake
First Presbyterian Church, Missoula
chapEpilogue_001_9780062944597_1_WB_SS_1200.png
Cowboys and cattle in camp
Fire on the mountain
Morrell Lake
Epilogue

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