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Salmon Fishing in the Yemen

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Author Paul Torday makes his debut with this clever absurdist novel. Fisheries scientist Dr. Alfred Jones is approached by an extravagantly wealthy sheik with a novel plan. To foster goodwill, the sheik would like to introduce salmon fishing to Yemen-the same Yemen that is largely a desert-and politicians think it's a great idea. "A remarkably assured first novel, this one is a pure delight."-Booklist, starred review
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Paul Torday hooks a winner, using his love of fishing to cast a witty look at modern-day politics through a wickedly satirical story of love, faith, and salmon fishing in the desert. Recorded Books brings the story to life in spite of the challenge of telling a story entirely through memos, diaries, emails, news reports, and court depositions. A full cast portrays the varied characters. John Sessions, especially, does well as the Milquetoast Dr. Alfred Jones of Britain's National Centre for Fisheries Excellence. This underachieving government scientist, married to an overachieving economist, finds his voice and passion in his search for a way to bring salmon to the desert wadis of Yemen. N.E.M. (c) AudioFile 2008, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 19, 2007
      In Torday's winningly absurdist debut, Dr. Alfred Jones feels at odds with his orderly life as a London fisheries scientist and husband to the career-driven Mary, with whom he shares a coldly dispassionate relationship. Just as Mary departs for a protracted assignment in Geneva, Alfred gets consulted on a visionary sheik's scheme to introduce salmon, and salmon-angling, to the country of Yemen. Alfred is deeply skeptical (salmon are cold-water fish that spawn in fresh water; Yemen is hot and largely desert), but the project gains traction when Peter Maxwell, the prime minister's director of communications, seizes on it as a PR antidote to negative press related to the Iraq war. Alfred is pressed by his superiors to meet with the sheik's real estate rep, the glamorous young Harriet, and embarks on a yearlong journey to realize the sheik's vision of spiritual peace through fly-fishing for the people of Yemen. British businessman and angler Torday captures Alfred's emerging humanity, Maxwell's antic solipsism, Mary's calculating neediness and Harriet's vulnerability, presenting their voices through diaries, e-mails, letters and official interviews conducted after the doomed venture's surprisingly tragic outcome.

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