
Grand Lake Stream sits only a short canoe ride from the Maine/New Brunswick border. For centuries, anglers from all over Maine, New England, and points much further away have come up to explore this remote tip of the country. They are rewarded with smallmouth bass, brook trout, and the much-coveted landlocked salmon. There are plenty of options and ample breathing room in which to explore, too. With 11 interconnected lakes, there is more water than woods.
This wild, idyllic setting is where Randy Spencer is fishing guide, author, and chronicler of oral history. All three come together in his most recent work, Written on Water.
Written on Water is a fishing book. But it assumes that genre in the same way that A River Runs Through It is a fishing story; or To Kill a Mockingbird is a crime novel. People are at the forefront of Spencer’s narrative. The woods, the water, and the fish are characters, too – albeit in a supporting capacity.
“Among the guides,” Spencer says, “we have this saying that it is all about the context. All we have to do is get out of the way and let people enjoy the view.” He’s witnessed magic happen among the incredibly diverse clientele that comes up to experience the Maine woods. “I see the same story play out over and over again. Without fail it repeats itself: that level of decompression. The beauty of our natural resources gets to someone who is wrapped up tight. To watch this happen to someone? It startles them. They’re spoken to in a way they haven’t heard for a long time, or, they are just hearing for the first time.”
Those stories, and the stories of the people who heard that voice decades ago and chose to stay in Grand Lake Stream, are the stories in Written on Water.
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