Synopsis
The Delaware River is the last major free-flowing river in the eastern United States. Drawing on their angling experience, the authors range through the 14,000 square miles of the Delaware River watershed. Besides giving directions to their favorite spots, they also mention nearby tackle shops, historical and scenic attractions, and more.
About the Author
George H. Ingram, Jr. is a Temple University administrator and freelance outdoors writer who lives on the Delaware and has published hunting and fishing articles in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Philadelphia Inquirer, Pennsylvania Game News, and other magazines and newspapers. Robert F. Marler, Jr. retired as a Temple University professor of English in 1994 after teaching at the institution for twenty-eight years. A long-time fly fisher, he lives on a farm in Benton, Pennsylvania, not far from Fishing Creek, with his wife, Jan, daughter, Mary Beth, and an aging Chevy pickup truck. Robert R. Smith retired as Dean of the School of Communications and Theater at Temple University in 1996, after serving in that position for almost eighteen years. An avid fisher, he is an authority on the literature of fly fishing who now resides on Trout Farm Lane in Plympton, Massachusetts, with his wife, Suzanne.
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