What do you guys think of Bradford Angier? I know some of the content (or all of the content) is a little old school, but I enjoy his matter-of-fact tone. He survived in the woods like I survive in my living room.
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What do you guys think of Bradford Angier? I know some of the content (or all of the content) is a little old school, but I enjoy his matter-of-fact tone. He survived in the woods like I survive in my living room.
My parents bought me the whole Foxfire series for Christmas last year. :D There is some awesome information in them.
Yes my mom still thinks Im 5 when Christmas comes.
but I am going to read survive now.
It is a fictional book but is very well written and leaves you hanging for the next page or chapter is One Second After. It's a story about the time after the lights go out. It leaves you with food for thought for a long while after the book is finished. I very highly recommend this read.
First welcome. We talk about books like "One Second After" over here:
https://www.m4carbine.net/showthread.php?t=64071
This thread is more wilderness survival manual based.
I know, I had to put in there. I read it first, which put me in the mindset to pick up "When all Hell Breaks Loose." It's another good one. Has any body read Dave Canterberry's book? I saw a copy a couple months ago at a gun show that was printed on waterproof paper, but had my eye on something else and my wife had to go (like I can't be trusted to go to a gunshow by myself)
+1 on the SAS book
http://i6.photobucket.com/albums/y21...ps9bc6ef93.jpg
Indeed. I have the "pocket version" of the SAS survival book in my Amazon wishlist. From the pics it looks small enough to be a worthwhile addition to the kits.