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[KLU]⇒ PDF Gratis The Way of the River My Journey of Fishing Forgiveness and Spiritual Recovery eBook Randy Kadish

The Way of the River My Journey of Fishing Forgiveness and Spiritual Recovery eBook Randy Kadish



Download As PDF : The Way of the River My Journey of Fishing Forgiveness and Spiritual Recovery eBook Randy Kadish

Download PDF  The Way of the River My Journey of Fishing Forgiveness and Spiritual Recovery eBook Randy Kadish

The Way of the River is a collection of memoirs and autobiographical stories that reflect Randy Kadish’s long journey of fishing and spiritual recovery. The journey, often difficult, often gratifying, began when he finally admitted to himself that he couldn’t communicate, and that his life had become unmanageable. Then, after he asked for help, he looked back into his life and relived the deep pain and loss that began during his very troubling childhood. To soothe himself he turned to the beauty of the outdoors and to fishing. As he struggled to come to terms with his past, and then with the loss of his parents, he wrote about his journey of recovery and of the interesting people he met along the way. (Soon his memoirs appeared in many publications including, The FlyFisher, FlyFishing & Tying Journal, and Yale Anglers' Journal.)

Finally, after an unexpected crisis, he found a surprising way to forgive and to connect to the good in the world.

The fishing in this collection takes place in and near New York City, including the East and Hudson Rivers, the streams of Westchester, and the lakes of Central and Prospect Parks.

The Way of the River My Journey of Fishing Forgiveness and Spiritual Recovery eBook Randy Kadish

As I began reading this book, I expected to read of the author's coming to know Christ, and becoming a believer.
As I realized that was not really the case, I was sad in a way. Yet I know that we are all still an unfinished jar of clay, and as long as the author lives, there is hope that the Holy Spirit will fill him and dwell within him.
As to the book itself, I genuinely lived it.
Life sometimes gives us lemons. I have learned to appreciate the lemonade. For it's bittersweet and refreshing flavor gives me a moment to pause and ponder on the wonder of the universe and the God who created it, and us. And thankfully, freely gives a choice to us. Seek the meaning of choice. The dreams and goals we have are but hints of what God has planned for each of us.

Product details

  • File Size 916 KB
  • Print Length 162 pages
  • Publisher Saw Mill River Press (November 17, 2013)
  • Publication Date November 17, 2013
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B008MMGN7M

Read  The Way of the River My Journey of Fishing Forgiveness and Spiritual Recovery eBook Randy Kadish

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The Way of the River My Journey of Fishing Forgiveness and Spiritual Recovery eBook Randy Kadish Reviews


I didn't expect this to be a forgivness book " first "and a fishing book "second". The writer was sensitive and in touch with his surroundings and learned the hard way fishing is about being with your friends. A good read and I have already passed it on to a friend.
Book was interesting but I thought the writer was having difficulty trying to decide if was writing a treatise on psychology and sociology or a book regarding fishing experiences.
This is a very well written book. Entertaining & informative. I was taken out of
my reading room & to the stream.
Once you have read Randy's other work this book fills you in on just who this gifted writer is. I enjoyed "getting to know him" better. Try it!
Fishermen, most particularly fly fishermen, often define themselves through their fishing. Or equate their fishing with themselves. Those who put down those words in memoir analyze their lives or their spirits on wilderness waters. Randy Kadish, a New Yorker, places much of his story in his environs, in or near a cityscape where life and fishing converge, their joys and sorrows resident. A unique venue that demonstrates the tired old adage "it's not always about the fishing" succinctly.

Trading a vista of the Rockies or the Smokies for a view of the Manhattan skyline, a pier, or a river an hour's train ride from the city, Kadish shows us that those of us who fish for more than the fish will seek its solace where and however we can, and the rewards are equal.

A soul-searching, honest examination of a life from behind the grip of a fly rod, "The Way of the River" rings true with any of us who have that one thing in our life that keeps us on an even keel.
I absolutely loved this book's cover, and because I, too, am a fly fisherman, I purchased it for my . I wasn't quite sure what to expect, based upon the book's title, but the one thing I was not prepared for was how this book touched me to my very core. There were some passages, especially in the early going, that actually moved me to tears. I could readily identify with so many aspects of Mr. Kadish's life experience that it was almost surreal. I, too, am a child of Brooklyn, drove a limousine, had a number of unrealized career objectives, and was a late bloomer. Not until I reached my 50th birthday did I ever quite measured up to those demanding "family expectations," and I often find fly fishing on my beloved Catskill streams to be the only reliable source of solace for my soul, which is very needy. A portion of that need was greatly satisfied by this introspective examination of fishing and its connection to man and the universe. Thanks, Randy, for the "connection" and a terrific read!
Most of my life, I've divided books into three categories, which I've read for three disparate reasons. Fiction was for entertainment. Non-fiction was divided into the more technical, which was for learning, and those that were biographical, to re-live things I've experienced in the past and to live vicariously those I haven't. The latter were also good for comparing the thinking and motivations of other humans, both as a means to understand others and to help understand myself. I've since realized that benefits overlap more than my explanations would indicate, but as a broad brush definition, I think they're valid.

My reason for bringing this up is twofold. The first is that Randy Kadish's writing I'd read prior to this was fiction, yet it was one of those exceptions, where in addition to entertainment, there was a lesson to be learned about the human condition buried in there if you were interested. My second thought is that, in the past (before the days of indie publishing), most memoirs I was aware of were by someone famous (or possibly infamous). While they might be inspirational (maybe a rags to riches story), they were also about people who, because of that fame, were harder to relate to, even if their name made the book more marketable.

I've found I can relate to the memoirs from people whose lives are more mainstream. Kadish is much more like you or I than one of those more famous memoirists. That Kadish and I are both male and about the same age might help too. This book is a series of essays where he works through the things that bother him about his life so far, regrets for choices not made and paths not taken. Each is done against the backdrop of his avocation of flyfishing, with his challenges on the river or stream often helping illuminate something about his life. It resonated for me, though I've never cast a fly in my entire life.

**Originally written for "Books and Pals" book blog. May have received a free review copy. **
As I began reading this book, I expected to read of the author's coming to know Christ, and becoming a believer.
As I realized that was not really the case, I was sad in a way. Yet I know that we are all still an unfinished jar of clay, and as long as the author lives, there is hope that the Holy Spirit will fill him and dwell within him.
As to the book itself, I genuinely lived it.
Life sometimes gives us lemons. I have learned to appreciate the lemonade. For it's bittersweet and refreshing flavor gives me a moment to pause and ponder on the wonder of the universe and the God who created it, and us. And thankfully, freely gives a choice to us. Seek the meaning of choice. The dreams and goals we have are but hints of what God has planned for each of us.
Ebook PDF  The Way of the River My Journey of Fishing Forgiveness and Spiritual Recovery eBook Randy Kadish

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