i just finished the dangerous river by rm patterson and i think you would enjoy it based on the selections above.
http://www.amazon.com/Dangerous-Rive...1526204&sr=8-1
i just finished the dangerous river by rm patterson and i think you would enjoy it based on the selections above.
http://www.amazon.com/Dangerous-Rive...1526204&sr=8-1
Bone Mountain by Eliot Pattison, The Lost Executioner by Nic Dunlop, Velocity by Dean koontz.
I finished Secret Agent last week and haven't started another.(I'm hoping Santa has something good for me to read on Christmas day) so I'm saving myself, just in case.
Recession; A period when you go without something your Grandparents never heard of.
I finally got around to reading Horace Kephart's - Book of Camping and Woodcraft. If you haven't read it I humbly suggest that you do. Even though it was written over a hundred years ago the advice and guidance is timeless especially if for some reason the power goes out for a prolonged period.
I also read "One Second After" which is about the aftermath of an EMP attack.
And the last book I read straight through was "Alas Babylon" which even though it was written in 1959 tells of the aftermath of a Nuclear attack on America and how people coped.
I appreciate that neither of the last two books are "Pink and fluffy" in their content but they do serve to make you think about exactly what survival would mean in these circumstances.
I pray that we never have to do it for real.
Rommel, Montgomery and Patton
Don't need the whole dog by James Slater. Second book in the life of a young ...... adventurer
I read about everything I can get my hands on. Recently I've read a couple books by Buckshot Bruce, fictional novels about SHTF. I recently read Laughter On the Mountain, it's a book about a young man that stayed with Sylvan Hart in the mid 1970's.
so the definition of a criminal is someone who breaks the law and you want me to believe that somehow more laws make less criminals?
The Personal Memoirs of Ulysses S Grant.
Wilderness Survival:
Surviving a temporary situation where you're lost in the wilderness
1. The New Testament KJV
2. Empire of the Summer Moon: Quanah Parker and the Rise and Fall of the Comanches, the Most Powerful Indian Tribe in American History, Gwynne
3. FM23-8
Lone Survivor by Marcus Luttrell,NOTE not for" half-***,no-logic,nitwit,all heart,no brain,and the judgment of a jackrabbit."
Ugh. Treating PTSD in Battered Women by Kubany Ralston.
Why do I live in Alaska? Because I can.
Alaska, the Madness! Bloggity Stories of the North Country
"Building Codes, Alaskans don't need no stinking Building Codes." Sourdough
Yes, I have wifi in my outhouse!
Bookmarks