Tales of the Mountain Men.
Next in line is Jim Beckwourth.
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Tales of the Mountain Men.
Next in line is Jim Beckwourth.
One man's wilderness, again...
Ski-doo Skandic, SWT Operator's Guide.....
Just got the new copies of Countryside and Backwoodsmen....good reading in both.
Bill Tilghman a Frontier Law man
I've been trying to get through A Light in August by Faulkner but with work and weekends exploring Boston, I haven't gone through 10 pages since November.
Re-reading a book called "CREEKER" by Linda Scott DeRosier mainly because I knew everyone mentioned in the book plus dated the author's sister. Brings back a lot of memories in her autobiography and gives an accurate account of growing up in Eastern KY, better times but she tells it like it was and names names.
Some old book printed in 1932 about Colonial furniture, clothing, belongings. Interesting in that it shows how common folks clothing changed over the years as they delt with their local situation in America - though Europe always had a strong influence on fashion.
I like how Cliff Notes advertises on this thread. :)
I can never read just one book at a time. Strange habit of mine, but I'm usually listening to one audiobook a week on my commute and 3-4 other paper books when the mood strikes me for either brain food or escape.
Just bought Cormic McCarthy's The Road on CD, so I'll be listening to that on the way to and from work for the next week or two.
Body Mind Mastery by Dan Millman (about 50 pages in, good, but not equal to some of his other stuff)
The Science of Happiness by Stefan Klein (first chapter, fair to good)
Sport Psychology for Cyclists by Saul Miller & Peggy Maass Hill (about 1/3 in, work related and fair to good)
Patriots by James Wesley Rawles (stuck at about 60 pages in and may not pick it up again. Difficult to read, too much ultraconservative Christianity, and way too much misogyny).
Survive! by Les Stroud (just purchased and next on my list to start)
The Resiliency Advantage by Al Siebert (just started)
98.6 Degrees by Cody Lundin (about 1/3-1/2 in, good, however, it's written for someone without basic knowledge that I gained years ago reading Bradford Angier and Tom Brown. It's also oriented toward a younger generation and I find some of his graphics and style distracting)
I'm with Endurance, I always have several books and magazines going. Currently:
The Shack - just past the part about his daughter's abduction, which really twisted me up. Now onto the healing...
The latest American Rifleman magazine.
Ice Limit (Lincoln Childs)
Quantico (Bear)
The Spring 2009 Park Seed Catalog!
Silent America (Whittle) a book of his essays.
Beyond Fear (Bruce Schneier)
Recently re-read Atlas Shrugged (Rand) which now reads like current events.
Just finished Blood Meridian (Cormac McCarthy) now ready for The Road!
Just finished "Collapse" after reading Diamond's "Guns, Germs & Steel" (which I swiped from my Dear Li'l Brother, dean o' peace studies). Good reads both, though I think he tends to become just a wee bit over-enamoured of his own notions and misses things.
Currently reading "The Fall" by Steve Taylor -- about the change in psychology of human beans as they evolved from hunter-gatherer societies to syphilisation. Goofy writing, interesting subject. Also reading "Bad Money" by Kevin Philips -- talking about dynamics & history of the current (book is a year old) economic situation. Money is about the last thing I care about, but I'll read anything Phillips writes. And re-reading Joseph Campbell's "The Hero With A Thousand Faces". Read it once some many decades back, and decided to slog through it again.
}}}}
South Moon Under, MARJORIE KINNAN RAWLINGS.
just bought the Zombie Survival Guide. haha funny stuff
Journey to the Center of the Earth by Jules Verne, Paradise Hotel by Martha Grimes and Far Eastern Tales by Somerset Maugham
I notices you read 98.6 have you read Cody Lundins 2nd book its a pretty good read. And informitive. His school is in the area where I live
I am currently reading Eyes of Eagle by William Johnstone its a great series
Interpreting our Heritage
Am currently reading Tony Hillerman novel The Fallen Man. It is a very good story about navajo cops in New mexico, although in one section he writes that the Indian lieutenant takes the safety off his .38 revolver, which of course is inaccurate. if you discount these errors, it is a good mystery.
Unless he has one of the "NEW" S&W :fuk2: and uses the key.Quote:
although in one section he writes that the Indian lieutenant takes the safety off his .38 revolver,
I am currently reading "Moose Dropping & Other Crimes Against Nature"
Funny Stories from Alaska
By Tom Brennan.
Quote:
A snowmachine threw its driver near Selawik, then took off by itself, nobody at the controls, and sped across ten miles of rough country. The local folks rejected the theory of a stuck throttle. They decided the machine was inhabited by an evil spirit and burned it.
Quote:
A CHEECHAKO (an Alaskan newcomer) charged into the hardware store and cornered the salesman who had sold him his chainsaw.
"I've been trying to cut wood for three days with this thing and it doesn't work worth a damn. I can cut wood faster with a plain old handsaw".
"Let me see it," the salesman said, reaching for the chainsaw. The cheechako followed the salesman into the back room and watched as the man removed the spark plugs and rubbed the contacts with a cloth.
"The plugs look clean as new," the sales man said, then yanked the saw's started cord. The chainsaw roared to life.
The cheechako covered his ears with his hands and shouted, "What's that noise?"
World made by hand by James Howard Kuntsler
"young men and fire" by norman maclean who is better known for "a river runs through it".
from publishers weekly.....
On Aug. 5, 1949, 16 Forest Service smoke jumpers landed at a fire in remote Mann Gulch, Mont. Within an hour, 13 were dead or irrevocably burned, caught in a "blowup"--a rare explosion of wind and flame. The late Maclean, author of the acclaimed A River Runs Through It , grew up in western Montana and worked for the Forest Service in his youth. He visited the site of the blowup; for the next quarter century, the tragedy haunted him. In 1976 he began a serious study of the fire, one that occupied the last 14 years of his life. He enlisted the aid of fire experts, survivors, friends in the Forest Service and reams of official documents. The result is an engrossing account of human fallibility and natural violence. The tragedy was a watershed in Forest Service training--knowledge and techniques have since been improving--and this work will interest Maclean's many admirers. Photos not seen by PW. 30,000 first printing.
sort of like "into the wild" or "into thin air".
enjoy!
I also read Young men and Fire and it was a great book. I am currently reading Into Thin Air. For people iterested in alaskan history, I also have a book called The Thousand Mile War, by Brian Garfield. which is about battles fought in Alaska during World War ll.
As for the revolver with the safety, I know what you mean, but this book was written in 1993, which I believe was before Smith and Wesson came out with safety locked revolvers.
I just finished "Extreme Measures" by Vince Flynn. It's about a CIA super agent that goes around killing terrorist and corrupt policticians. Crazy thing is he started the series and talked about the threat to the US before 9/11 ever happened.
Now I moving on to Intro to Forestry and some other college class.
Reading “Camp Life in the Woods and the Tricks of Trapping” Originally published in 1881.
Never seen a book with so many traps in it.
what am I reading "wilderness survival" related?
I just finished reading "Advanced Fugitive" by Kenn Abaygo. It was pretty good... most of it is common sense and experience, mixed with a bit of wisdom... but, it was worth reading... not worth buying, but worth reading.
I've also looked at a few different "survival" web sites... most of them have some OK advice... some better than others... like anything else, you try to learn the good, reject the bad...
Alas Babylon, by Pat Frank. The t.v. show Jericho was based on this book, which is set in 1950's cold war era.
I just started reading a very good survival book called The Man Who Walked Through Time, about the first man who hiked through the entire Grand Canyon. Also I am reading In the Presence of My Enemies, by Gracia Burnham, who was kidnapped and held hostage in Phillipine jungle by terrorists.
I just finished reading a book people on forum might enjoy. It is called The Purification Ceremony by mark T. Sullivan. it is an exciting story about deer hunters being stalked by a psycho killer in British Columbia. The main character is a native American woman and there is much information about deer hunting as well as exciting action.
I've gotten into the books by Tom Brown Jr. lately... what I've read so far:
The Tracker
Case Files of the Tracker
Field Guide to Nature Observation and Tracking
I'm almost done with Grandfather
and have The Way of the Scout waiting to be read
I like the way his books aren't just about survival or tracking, but also incorporate the spiritual aspect of the wilderness. Even if you're one of those people who say he's full of sh*t, and this stuff didn't really happen to him, he's still a very good writer and is worth reading.
I am currently reading:
"The Road" by Cormac McCarthy
I'm hungry because I'm currently reading: http://www.thecapitalgrille.com/menu...inCourses.asp?
Just bought into the wild hope it's good.
I just started "Fear Less" by Gavin De Becker. He also the #1 best seller
"The Gift of Fear".
"The Complete Tracker" by Len McDougall
"The complete guide to country living: A discursive dictionary"
One of the best informational books I have read. Not only does it describe methodology, but it also gives a list of books AND websites where you can find more information on any particular subject discussion. It has been elevated to one of the "must have's" in my collection.
It focuses mainly on agriculture methods (gardening), raising animals, and preserving food. I think that many of these subjects are, by proxy, important for a good survivalist (should things be more long term than we expect.)
I just bought these books The Vegetable Gardener’s Bible and Saving Seeds and Preserving the Harvest. I am reading them in order of necessity, starting with the Vegetable Gardner’s Bible.