Tales of Fishes, Zane Grey
Tales of Fishes, Zane Grey
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Tales of Fishes

Author: Zane Grey

Narrator: Sean Pratt

Unabridged: 8 hr 19 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 03/10/2026


Synopsis

The classic Western author’s riveting tales of his encounters fishing in the deep sea

Zane Grey (1872–1939) is best remembered for his novels of the Old West. His most successful work, Riders of the Purple Sage (1912), displays many classic features of the genre, including cattle-rustling, horse-theft, kidnapping, and gunfights.

Tales of Fishes, first published in 1919, reflects one of Grey’s favorite hobbies: deep-sea fishing. (His son claimed that Grey spent 300 days out of the year fishing.) This vivid and exciting book describes his encounters with various big-sea fish, including tarpon, sailfish, marlin, big tuna, and the broadbill swordfish, “the gladiator of the sea.”

Grey’s love of the sport shines on every page of this luminous book. Describing his fight with a tarpon, he writes: “Five times he sprang toward the blue sky, and as many he plunged down with a thunderous crash. The reel screamed. The line sang. The rod, which I had thought stiff as a tree, bent like a willow wand.”

Throughout this book, Grey emphasizes the tremendous strength and skill required to catch fish that often weigh several hundred pounds. At one point, the blisters on his hands keep him from fishing for three days. But hardships never keep him from these intense encounters with wildness at its most powerful.

Grey also displays a strong and principled sportsmanship. He complains about the use of heavy tackle, which skews the game against the fish and which he finds unsporting.

Equally compelling are the characters that Grey fishes with: his brother and companion R.C.; his guide Attalano, with “a cheering figure, lithe and erect, with a springy stride, bespeaking the Montezuma blood said to flow in his Indian veins”; and an English nobleman “who never thought of himself. Hardship to him was nothing.”

One day, Grey remarks, “What sport I would have; what treasure of keen sensation would I store; what flavor of life would I taste this day! Hope burns always in the heart of a fisherman.”

Over 100 years later, Grey’s account of “the royal purple game of the sea” will mesmerize anyone who has ever gone deep-sea fishing—or even imagined it.

About Zane Grey

The prolific American writer Zane Grey was the pioneer of the Western literary genre. Grey produced well over 100 books, in which he presented the West as a moral battleground, where his characters were either destroyed or redeemed. His semi-outlaw heroes were his most enduring creation. He sold some 17 million books during his lifetime, and an estimated 100 Hollywood Western films have been based on his stories.

Born with the name Pearl Grey in Zanesville, Ohio, in 1872, Zane was the son of a farmer and part-time preacher. His mother was a second-generation Danish Quaker. He graduated from the University of Pennsylvania with a degree in dentistry in 1896 and practiced in New York City until 1904. That year, Grey wrote and self-published his first book, Betty Zane, after it was turned down by several publishers. The colorful frontier story was based on his mother's journal and eventually became a critical success. He married Lina Elise Roth, who encouraged him to become a full-time professional writer.

In 1908, Grey made a journey to the West with Colonel C. J. "Buffalo" Jones, who told him tales of adventure on the plains. This trip turned out to be a turning point in Grey's career. In 1912, Riders of the Purple Sage was published. It sold 2 million copies and was filmed three times. Grey's formula-in which a mysterious outlaw fights to protect the innocent and the good-shows up in many of his novels. In 1918, he moved to Altadena, California, where he lived for the rest of his life. Grey died on October 23, 1939.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Gerald on August 07, 2019

This was a well written description of ocean fishing. The writer’s fish stories describe the mental and physical demands of trying to land the largest and most numerous catches of swordfish, marlin, tuna and several other species of deep water fish. Imagine listening to story after story of fighting......more

Goodreads review by Richard Nicklin on September 01, 2018

Beautiful descriptions of fish and an ecosystem now badly damaged. Loved the purple prose, but was saddened by the author’s descriptions of vast shoals of tuna where they are now rare.......more

Goodreads review by Shauna on August 12, 2020

I would enjoy this more if I were an outdoorsy Fisher type person but I'm not. But this is beautifully written though. Compelling drama around a sort of chill activity such as fishing.......more

Goodreads review by Richard on March 21, 2025

I read this on the plane from Chicago to San Juan, Puerto Rico. It was a good book, well done, but enough with the fish tales. I skimmed it.......more