A Doryman's Day - illustration detail

A Doryman's Day

Barry Fisher

Published with Maine Maritime Museum

Paperback, $15, ISBN 978-0-88448-233-8

7 x 10, 192 pages, drawings and photographs

Regional History / Maritime

"Yup. A Doryman's Day is the finest kind of a downwind run."
—Joe Garland, WoodenBoat Magazine

". . . Fisher speaks in a voice that is so authentic and familiar we might as well be joining him for a mug-up in the snug galley of a schooner just home from the banks."
—Bill Mayher, Maritime Life and Traditions

"A rare man indeed. And a rare book."
—Clint Trowbridge, Maine Time

"I have often thought that I was born a hundred years too late, and Captain Fisher's tales of adventure, danger, and good, rough living—told from the heart of a true seaman—renew this longing for an earlier fishing era. With a wealth of rich, vivid detail, captured in the salty vernacular of the dorymen, Fisher documents life aboard a fishing schooner in a well-crafted work that will be enjoyed by novice and seasoned fishermen alike."
—Linda Greenlaw, author of The Hungry Ocean

"Barry had the rare gift of combining accuracy with narrative style when spinning his sea yarns. Reading them is like renewing the acquaintance of old friends."
—Erik A. R. Ronnberg, Jr.

We'd be hard put to decide whether Barry Fisher is better at fishing or storytelling. The three stories in this book are rollicking gems, salty as a flake of cod set out to dry. "A Wharf Rat's Tale" takes us to Gloucester, Massachusetts, a town where, "if you didn't go fishing, you got out of town." It was a fascinating, adventurous place for a boy in the late '30s, as young Barry and his pals pick up odd jobs on the wharves, repair a beat-up dory, hang out with the schooner crews, and take up fishing themselves, catching the fattest flounders at the sewer outfall in the harbor.

Barry Fisher went offshore dory-fishing for real when he was eighteen, and "A Doryman's Day," he says now, is "as accurate as my old mind can make it." He describes fishing longline trawl gear from Grand Banks dories launched off the deck of a schooner in wonderful detail and paints a vivid picture of a working day in a fishery straight out of history. A few years later, he went on a late-season swordfishing trip, dory-fishing from a schooner with a crew betting against the weather and the odds that they'd come home with a catch. "Mysterious Ways of the Lord, or How Captain Jack Brant of the Swordfishing Schooner lorna b Found God in a Split Second and then Achieved Salvation on the Northern Edge of George's Bank" gives you just a hint of the story to come.

Born and brought up in Gloucester, Massachusetts, Barry Fisher went fishing as a "catchee" at fourteen, went into the Merchant Marine in 1943 at fifteen, fished up and down the East Coast of the United States, Canada, and Newfoundland after World War II, did two combat tours in Korea. After Captain Fisher received bachelor's and master's degrees at Harvard, he went back to fishing, first out of New Bedford and then on the West Coast, where he also taught at Oregon State University for four years, and in the late '70s he led an effort to start joint fishing ventures with the Russians, trawling for whiting off the Pacific Northwest coast, and for flounder and codfish in the Bering Sea. From the late '80s on, Captain Fisher worked promoting marine science and fishery research at Oregon State University and with the National Marine Fisheries Services.

Cover painting of alongshore dory fishing, in "Fishermen," © John Neville.