1.
We have reached the time in the life of the planet, and humanity's demand upon it, when every fisherman will have to be a river-keeper, a steward of marine shallows, a watchman on the high seas. We are beyond having to put back what we have taken out. We must put back more than we take out.
Thomas McGuane
2.
Angling is extremely time consuming. That's sort of the whole point.
Thomas McGuane
3.
I'd be happy to have my biography be the stories of my dogs. To me, to live without dogs would mean accepting a form of blindness.
Thomas McGuane
4.
America is like one of those old-fashioned six-cylinder truck engines that can be missing two sparkplugs and have a broken flywheel and have a crankshaft that's 5000 millimeters off fitting properly, and two bad ball-bearings, and still runs. We're in that kind of situation. We can have substantial parts of the population committing suicide, and still run and look fairly good.
Thomas McGuane
5.
The occupational hazard of making a spectacle of yourself, over the long haul, is that at some point you buy a ticket too.
Thomas McGuane
6.
Early on I decided that fishing would be my way of looking at the world. First it taught me to look at rivers. Lately it has been teaching me how to look at people, myself included.
Thomas McGuane
7.
You can't say enough about fishing. Though the sport of kings, it's just what the deadbeat ordered.
Thomas McGuane
8.
My life was the best omelette you could make with a chainsaw
Thomas McGuane
9.
I may be the wrong person for my life.
Thomas McGuane
10.
Fishing should be a ceremony that reaffirms our place in the natural world and helps us resist further estrangement from our origins.
Thomas McGuane
11.
I simply feel that the frontier of angling is no longer either ethical or geographical. The Bible tells us to watch and listen. Something like this suggests what fishing ought to be about: using the ceremony of our sport and passion to arouse greater reverberations within ourselves.
Thomas McGuane
12.
An undisturbed river is as perfect as we will ever know, every refractive slide of cold water a glimpse of eternity.
Thomas McGuane
13.
To me, no painter has ever quite understood the light, the distances, the aboriginal ghostliness of the American West as well as Maynard Dixon. The great mood of his work is solitude, the effect of land and space on people. While his work stands perfectly well on its claims to beauty, it offers a spiritual view of the West indispensable to anyone who would understand it.
Thomas McGuane
14.
It don't do you no nevermind to tell nobody nothing.
Thomas McGuane
15.
I had just settled Grandma on her folding chair and popped open our box lunch when the corpse floated by.
Thomas McGuane
16.
Generally, we are united in the belief that all rod design has been progressive and that the ideas about fly rods in the past were so bad as to make it amazing that people were able to fish at all.
Thomas McGuane
17.
We both liked children; we just didn't want any ourselves. There were children everywhere, and we saw no reason to start our own brand. Young couples plunge into parenthood and about half the time they end up with some ghastly problem on their hands. We thought we'd leave that to others.
Thomas McGuane
18.
The trouble is, you can't properly present something you don't believe in.
Thomas McGuane
19.
It's funny, but... you're sort of a moving target for fortune, and you never know when it will befall you.
Thomas McGuane
20.
Something had gone amiss with men, and the weak ones were dangerous.
Thomas McGuane
21.
The mountains paralleled the valley and the snowy peaks were extending with fall to the valley floor.
Thomas McGuane
22.
I like young girls. Their stories are shorter.
Thomas McGuane
23.
Giving freaks a pass is the oldest tradition in Montana.
Thomas McGuane
24.
Literature is the ditch I'm going to die in. It's still the thing I care most about.
Thomas McGuane
25.
After fifty years of living, it occurs to me that the most significant thing that people do is go to work, whether it is to go to work on their novel or at the assembly plant or fixing somebody's teeth.
Thomas McGuane
26.
By your late thirties the ground has begun to grow hard. It grows harder and harder until the day that it admits you.
Thomas McGuane
27.
Young anglers love new rivers the way they love the rest of their lives. Time does not seem to be of the essence and somewhere in the system is what they are looking for.
Thomas McGuane
28.
In the future, I mean to be a fine streamside entomologist. I'm going to start on that when I am much too old to do any of the two thousand things I can think of that are more fun than screening insects in cold running water
Thomas McGuane
29.
The essence of sport is courage.
Thomas McGuane