Dan Kelly -
McPhee has been a hero of mine for a couple of decades. His books on geology literally changed the way I see the world. A remarkable writer with even more remarkable interests. (Have you followed his recent pieces in The New Yorker about the curmudgeon tanker truck driver?)
It is a shame that someone with McPhee's talent chose fly fishing as the sport he wrote about. Golf could have used him.
Why he isn't more widely known is a mystery to me.
Another hidden gem.
Bob
Bob --
Well put -- though his relative obscurity isn't too mysterious, I think. McPhee's writing is as dense as ... limestone, maybe. It's wonderful, but very demanding, and I don't think there are many well-known writers, nowadays, who are demanding of the reader.
If you haven't read any Susan Orlean, I recommend that you do so. The McPhee influence is very, very evident. I'm right now re-reading "The Orchid Thief" (extremely loosely adapted to the big screen as "Adaptation"), and I'm liking it better the second time around. This second time, I'm well aware that her vanity is going to irritate me some (she intrudes on her story more than she has any reason to), so I can look past it and see all of the wonderful stuff in the book: the history of "orchid fever," the crazy orchid fanatics, the swamp-land salesmen and other wonders of Florida -- a place that never before seemed all that interesting to me.
Dan