Description
About the Author
Hal Elliott Wert grew up in Newton, Iowa, where he fished and swam in the surrounding creeks, rivers, lakes, and strip mines. As a Boy Scout, he hiked and camped throughout the state, and in high school, he floated and fished the Skunk River. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Kansas and is a professor of American history at the Kansas City Art Institute. He lives in Overland Park, Kansas.
Reviews
Wert's own knowledgeable enthusiasm about the places Hoover fished, as well as his tireless research in the local newspapers, diaries, and other rarely used records from which he has assembled the story of Hoover's passion for fishing, make this book unique. -- K. A. Clements, author of Hoover, Conservation and Consumerism
With verve and insight, Hal Elliott Wert traces Hoover's remarkable lifelong adventures as a fisherman and thereby opens a window on Hoover's soul. Readers of this lively story will come away with a deeper understanding of one of our most enigmatic statesmen-and a powerful urge to explore the streams where Hoover found solace and renewal. -- George H. Nash, author of The Life of Herbert Hoover
Although Herbert Hoover struggled with many world crises throughout his public life, he always found peace when he stood in mountain streams in search of the elusive brook trout. Hal Wert shows us how fishing tempered and relaxed this extraordinary American and made him a better, more compassionate humanitarian. -- Timothy Walch, Director of the Herbert Hoover Presidential Library
Book Information
ISBN 9780811738873
Author Hal Elliott Wert
Format Paperback
Page Count 416
Imprint Stackpole Books
Publisher Stackpole Books
Weight(grams) 36g
Dimensions(mm) 228mm * 154mm * 24mm