I know this isn't a hunting book, per se, but a gentleman I came to know wrote what I believe is one of the finest short stories on the subject of trout fishing ever written.
Jack Gilchrist was a died -in- the- wool newspaper man here in GA, and speech writer and aide for many of our governors during the 50's, 60's, and 70's .
Jack was a recurve and longbow shooter and lived in the little town of Ellaville, GA. He wrote with such clarity and had such a thrifty use of words that reading it took my breath away- and to read a story written by someone I knew, but obviously not well enough-after he had been my acquaintance for some time- was very surreal.
It's contained in a book called "Fishing's Best Short Stories"- twenty-five memorable stories from the mid-19th to the 20th century from some of the most popular and respected writers which truly capture the spirit of the sport.
The contributors include Stephen King, P.J. O'Rourke, Guy De Maupassant, Robert Traver, Joyce Renwick, Henry van Dyke, Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm, E. Annie Proulx, Thomas McGuane, Philip Wyle, John Taintor Foote, Bob Shacochis, Stephen Vincent Bent, Jack Gilchrist, Bob Shcochis, Robert Traver, Elmer Ransom, Geoffrey Norman, Weldon Stone, Jason Lucas, Edwin L. Peterson, Roland Pertwee, Paul Hyde Bonner, Warren Gibson, and Sparse Grey Hackle.
It's still one of the greatest outdoor stories I've personally read, and though bittersweet, every year or so I pull it down from the shelf ,grab a glass of something and think about my buddy Jack- his wife's grand bbq chicken, the quiet calm of his home, and his love of hunting with the bow, which came to him way too late in life.
I believe shortly after Jack's wife passed he went into a nursing home, and is enduring the latter stages of Alzheimer's.
I recommend this book greatly to anyone who has the spirit of the outdoors in their heart.