A delightful story about the hazards of bass fishing in a small creek in the upper right hand corner of Pennsylvania, which empties into the Delaware River at the tiny village of Lackawaxen, Pennsylvania. The site later witnessed the writing of Zane Grey's best Western adventure tales, and is an American literary landmark which deserves public support an protection.
Lackawaxen is a few dozen miles east of Scranton and fewer than 15 miles north of Interstate Highway 84. WiIth a population not larger than the population at the time of the author's presence there after the turn of the century, the area is popular with canoeists and float fishermen when weather permits. Most sportsmen pass by the Zane Grey Inn unaware of its history or any interest in the Lackawaxen River that joins the Delaware near by.
Genre: Western
Lackawaxen is a few dozen miles east of Scranton and fewer than 15 miles north of Interstate Highway 84. WiIth a population not larger than the population at the time of the author's presence there after the turn of the century, the area is popular with canoeists and float fishermen when weather permits. Most sportsmen pass by the Zane Grey Inn unaware of its history or any interest in the Lackawaxen River that joins the Delaware near by.
Genre: Western
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