Fishing!: A Novel

Written by:
Sarah Stonich
Narrated by:
Kimberly M. Wetherell

Unabridged Audiobook

Ratings
Book
3
Narrator
2
Release Date
March 2023
Duration
11 hours 15 minutes
Summary
A hilarious saga of fishing, family, and three generations of tough, independent women-the first in a trilogy

Having fled the testosterone-soaked world of professional sport fishing, thirty-something RayAnne Dahl is navigating a new job as a consultant for the first all-women talk show about fishing on public television (or, as one viewer's husband puts it, 'Oprah in a boat'). After the host bails, RayAnne lands in front of the camera and out of her depth at the helm of the show. Is she up for the challenge? Meanwhile, her family proves as high-maintenance as her fixer-upper house and her clingy rescue dog. Her dad, star of the one-season Big Rick's Bass Bonanza, is on his sixth wife and falling off the wagon and into RayAnne's career path; her mother, a new-age aging coach for the menopausal rich, provides endless unwanted advice; and her beloved grandmother Dot-whose advice RayAnne needs-is far away and far from well.

But as RayAnne says, 'I'm a woman, I fish. Deal with it.' And just when things seem to be coming together-the show is an unlikely hit; she receives the admiration of a handsome sponsor (out of bounds as he is, but definitely in the wings); ungainly house and dog are finally in hand-RayAnne's world suddenly threatens to capsize, and she's faced with a gut-wrenching situation and a heartbreaking decision.
Reviews
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Carolyn B.

It takes a while for a plot to surface in Sarah Stonich’s FISHING! You won’t mind, though. Stonich’s sardonic wit and absurdist humor hooks you from the first chapter and reels you in without a fight. The audio version of the book pumps up the experience through the narrative mastery of Kimberly M. Wetherell, who brings the charm, sassiness, or abrasion needed for each character's voice. If you read the cover copy of FISHING!, you won’t be expecting navel-gazing, new-age literary pretentions, nor protagonists oozing toxic masculinity. Yet these two literary tropes provide hilarious irony against Stonich’s uber cautious, self-effacing protagonist RayAnne Dahl. In her early 30s, RayAnne is already disillusioned by the smallness of her life when compared to her larger-than-life family members. Nevermind that RayAnne hosts a highly-rated PBS talk show for women, ironically called Fishing!—which happens to take place on a super-sexy, speed boat named Penelope—RayAnn just doesn’t get what a big deal she is. After graduating university with a journalism degree, she avoided adulting by making a name for herself as a woman successing (sic) in the sportfishing circuit. It’s as if she has success-dysmorphia (like body dysmorphia blocks a person’s ability to accurately perceive their body size/shape), or perhaps what’s actually recognized as “imposter’s syndrome.” It could be because RayAnne sees herself a minnow in a family of whales, groupers, and sturgeons (thankfully, no sharks). Her divorced parents are huge fish in their own small ponds. Big Rick, her raging alcoholic father, was once a top-tier sport fisherman and host of his own short-lived fishing show. Her new-age diva mother leads shamanic retreats to guide women through menopause and never available when RayAnne seems to need her. RayAnne's brother is a writer and work-from-home father of twin boys, married to an uber-successful Harvard-educated brainiac who is both beautiful and nice. Over it all is Dot, Big Rick’s mother, a former chef who now volunteers her culinary chops at a homeless shelter. It’s no wonder RayAnne has issues. In the final episode of her show’s second season, RayAnne melts down during an interview with the cameras rolling. What she sees as complete failure is perceived by her sponsors and viewers as transcendent in honesty and revelatory in character. Only through the sassy uplifting of her grandmother Dot, tied to a tear-jerking decision no one should ever have to make, does RayAnne begin to see herself and her important others without bias and judgment. The ending scenes were lovely and respectful, despite the harrowing decisions made by the characters. The magic of it all is how Stonich maintains the humor without casting away the pathos.

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Anonymous

I loved this book…and am a huge fan of the author! The book is about family; a definite bond between the grandmother and granddaughter, the main character. I’m from Minnesota so I connected on so many themes…all aspects of fishing, boats, and food. Loved the humor and the narrator was spot-on! Mo Mahle

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