The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Greg Myerson’s rough voyage to a world record

‘Born to Fish’ tells of area man’s fishing crown, epiphany

- By Joe Amarante

A story like Greg Myerson’s isn’t as common in Connecticu­t’s densely packed New Haven County as in more rural areas of the country. Which makes it even more intriguing.

Son of a mobster from Brooklyn, N.Y., who married after he settled in a Hamden apartment, Greg became obsessed with fishing at a young age near his Hamden-North Haven homes, despite his family’s indifferen­ce. He grew into a large, rugged outdoorsma­n who caught a world-record striped bass, and now his story is told in a brisk read, with many local and regional references, by Myerson and outdoors writer Tim Gallagher.

“Born to Fish: How an Obsessed Angler Became the World’s Greatest Striped Bass Fisherman” hits bookstores Tuesday; and Myerson and Gallagher will be at R.J. Julia Bookseller­s in Madison to talk about it on Thursday at 7 p.m.

When I was covering North Branford

six years ago, I wrote about Myerson, a large, restive man on the verge of one of his many life transition­s — moving from North Branford back to Wallingfor­d, where he had attended Lyman Hall High School. The article talked about how Myerson had spent a life fishing and observing the Atlantic coast striped bass and its habits, leading to his catch of an 81-pounder that blew away the world record.

But it also told of how Myerson regretted killing the huge fish, since it was “wiping out a good breeding stock by killing fish like that.” So he

The book also covers substance abuse, wild trips to Jamaica and out West, but also Myerson inventing the RattleSink­er, the lure that mimics the sound of the favorite meal of the striped bass and helped him catch his world-record fish.

turned to catch-and-release fishing, and set an all-tackle length record of 113 centimeter­s (about 3.7 feet). He has made no-kill fishing tournament­s a crusade.

The new book fills in some amazing back story to Myerson’s bitterswee­t life — trapping animals on water company land, exchanging gunshots with rival trappers, earning enough money to buy a boat in elementary school, fishing mishaps, recalling visits by his famous aunt Bess Myerson (remember her?), overcoming learning disabiliti­es, playing football for the University of Rhode Island and his gregarious father’s sometimes-violent life.

The book also covers substance abuse, wild trips to Jamaica and out West, but also Myerson inventing the RattleSink­er, the lure that mimics the sound of the favorite meal of the striped bass (lobster on the rocks) and helped him catch his worldrecor­d fish. And two short chapters tell of Myerson’s tense but entertaini­ng appearance on “Shark Tank” to sell a piece of that invention. There is also a haunting personal tragedy that befalls writer Gallagher just after he met Myerson.

Myerson’s story and the buddies of his World Record Striper Co., so casual and charismati­c that they could be the focus of a reality TV show (and may still be), illuminate a life of obsession about the creatures of the outdoor world. Anglers don’t need any more bait than that.

 ?? Sara Pranulis / Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ?? Greg Myerson of Wallingfor­d, subject of “Born to Fish.”
Sara Pranulis / Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Greg Myerson of Wallingfor­d, subject of “Born to Fish.”
 ?? Courtesy of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ?? “Born to Fish: How an Obsessed Angler Became the World’s Greatest Striped Bass Fisherman” hits bookstores Tuesday. Greg Myerson and Tim Gallagher will be at R.J. Julia Bookseller­s in Madison to talk about it on Thursday at 7 p.m.
Courtesy of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt “Born to Fish: How an Obsessed Angler Became the World’s Greatest Striped Bass Fisherman” hits bookstores Tuesday. Greg Myerson and Tim Gallagher will be at R.J. Julia Bookseller­s in Madison to talk about it on Thursday at 7 p.m.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States