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Patrick McManus' national best-seller, The Night the Bear Ate Goombaw, is a collection of hilarious short pieces about fishing, its exotic equipment, and activities like "gunkholing." You will learn, for example, that the best way to learn to fish is to build an addition to your house first. It should be big enough to hold all the nifty fishing equipment you will cart home from sporting goods stores and garage sales. McManus cheerfully guides you through the finer points of becoming a show more skilled garage sale shopper, too. Be prepared to enter a quixotic universe that works according to the laws of "synch" and marvelously loopy chains of cause and effect. show lessTags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
I love Patrick McManus and his humor. The only problem with this collection is that it's more of the same mix of slapstick stories and self-effacing Benchley-style essays. If you haven't read McManus, this is a perfectly fine place to start. It doesn't matter if you have absolutely no interest in or knowledge about outdoor sports.
This collection features several of my all time top favorite Patrick McManus stories, The Night the Bear Ate Goombaw, Sequences, The Dumbest Antelope, The Fried Flies, Please, and Easy on the Garlic, Out of Sync, Getting it in the Ear, Never Cry ‘Arp!’, Whitewater Fever, and more.
I was introduced to McManus’s work by my father, almost twenty years ago. Everyone in my family likes to read, and for a while my father put us to bed by reading to us from various books. I remember how we all groaned the first time he pulled out a Patrick McManus book. By the end of the first story we were hooked.
Don’t worry if you aren’t an outdoorsy type person. The humor in these books will appeal to anyone. In fact, several of the stories are show more written from the perspective of an old hand giving a newcomer to the outdoor life some sage advice – like Gunkholing, A Brief History of Boats and Marriage, How to Get Started in Bass Fishing, and At Loose Ends.
Quite a lot of the collection actually focuses on stories about young Patrick’s life on the farm, and his adventures with his dog Strange and his best friends Crazy Eddie and Retch Sweeney. This includes Kid Brothers and Their Practical Application, The Night the Bear Ate Goombaw, Scritch’s Creek, The Tin Horn, Cupidity, Draw Thy Bow, and Never Cry ‘Arp!’
The title story, featuring Crazy Eddie’s grandmother Goombaw, never fails to cheer me up. Even to this day, I laugh at loud at this story… actually, even re-reading this for the umpteenth time, I still laughed at loud several times.
In fact, one time I lent this book to a co-worker. She returned it, and admitted she hadn’t finished it — because it was too funny. Trying to read it during her bus commute had led to her getting kicked off the bus for laughing to loud. show less
I was introduced to McManus’s work by my father, almost twenty years ago. Everyone in my family likes to read, and for a while my father put us to bed by reading to us from various books. I remember how we all groaned the first time he pulled out a Patrick McManus book. By the end of the first story we were hooked.
Don’t worry if you aren’t an outdoorsy type person. The humor in these books will appeal to anyone. In fact, several of the stories are show more written from the perspective of an old hand giving a newcomer to the outdoor life some sage advice – like Gunkholing, A Brief History of Boats and Marriage, How to Get Started in Bass Fishing, and At Loose Ends.
Quite a lot of the collection actually focuses on stories about young Patrick’s life on the farm, and his adventures with his dog Strange and his best friends Crazy Eddie and Retch Sweeney. This includes Kid Brothers and Their Practical Application, The Night the Bear Ate Goombaw, Scritch’s Creek, The Tin Horn, Cupidity, Draw Thy Bow, and Never Cry ‘Arp!’
The title story, featuring Crazy Eddie’s grandmother Goombaw, never fails to cheer me up. Even to this day, I laugh at loud at this story… actually, even re-reading this for the umpteenth time, I still laughed at loud several times.
In fact, one time I lent this book to a co-worker. She returned it, and admitted she hadn’t finished it — because it was too funny. Trying to read it during her bus commute had led to her getting kicked off the bus for laughing to loud. show less
I love Patrick F. McManus! Wait, he his still alive and may misinterpret that. I love the writings of Patrick F. McManus. Therefore, my objectivity may be somewhat lacking.
I read this book serveral years ago.
This is an excellent book (i.e., a 5 on a 5 point scale), which is much more than I expect when I buy a book.
Mr. McManus writes humorous short stories about outdoor recreation, mainly fishing and hunting. His works have appeared in 'Outdoor Life' and 'Field and Stream'.
The book contains 26 of his short stories.
Except for the dust jacket, there are no illustraions.
He is incredible!
Negatives:
Too pricey.
Too little content in each book. I need a three hundred page collection.
There should have been a cartoon or two with each story.
I read this book serveral years ago.
This is an excellent book (i.e., a 5 on a 5 point scale), which is much more than I expect when I buy a book.
Mr. McManus writes humorous short stories about outdoor recreation, mainly fishing and hunting. His works have appeared in 'Outdoor Life' and 'Field and Stream'.
The book contains 26 of his short stories.
Except for the dust jacket, there are no illustraions.
He is incredible!
Negatives:
Too pricey.
Too little content in each book. I need a three hundred page collection.
There should have been a cartoon or two with each story.
McManus doesn't seem to run out of funny stories. This is another collect of tales that will have tears running down your face. Just don't laugh so hard you pee your pants. that might be embarrassing
Got a few chuckles, but not near as good as the Grasshopper Trap
Has McManus lost his mojo?
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Author Information

44+ Works 6,497 Members
Patrick Francis McManus was born in Sandpoint, Idaho on August 25, 1933. He received a bachelor's degree in journalism in 1956 and a master's degree in journalism in 1959 from Washington State College, Pullman. He taught English, creative writing, and journalism at Eastern Washington State College from 1960 until he retirement in 1983. He was a show more magazine writer. From 1977 to 1982, he was a columnist and associate editor for Field and Stream magazine. From 1982 to 2009, he wrote a monthly humor column called the Last Laugh for Outdoor Life magazine and served as the publication's editor-at-large. His work has also appeared in Reader's Digest, Sports Illustrated, and the New York Times. He published 14 collections of his columns including A Fine and Pleasant Misery and The Horse in My Garage and Other Stories. His other books include Real Ponies Don't Go Oink!, The Night the Bear Ate Goombaw, The Deer on a Bicycle: Excursions into the Writing of Humor, and Whatchagot Stew written with Patricia McManus Gass. He also wrote the Sheriff Bo Tully Mystery series. He died on April 11, 2018 at the age of 84. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Awards and Honors
Distinctions
Series
Common Knowledge
- Original publication date
- 1989
Classifications
- Genres
- Fiction and Literature, General Fiction
- DDC/MDS
- 818 — Literature & rhetoric American literature in English American miscellaneous writings in English
- LCC
- PN6162 .M349 — Language and Literature Literature (General) Literature (General) Collections of general literature Wit and humor By region or country
- BISAC
Statistics
- Members
- 467
- Popularity
- 64,938
- Reviews
- 6
- Rating
- (4.03)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 11
- UPCs
- 1
- ASINs
- 3




























































