I have been thinking about this lately. I just finished reading Lights Out again for the 3rd time (yeah, it passes the time at work and at night)
As stated in other threads, the characters in most of these books are either already set up or magically come into some money and luck.
I think I have read every one of these books, at least twice. I enjoy them and with small kids, its hard to get out as much and pay for the SuperNintendoGear anymore.
And other than the PAW fiction, what about the survival reference books?
I read, read, research, practice and fail. Then repeat until I get pretty good. Well, acceptable.
So, we have the "magic list" from my library
Alas, Babylon
Patriots
One Second After
Normal and the other parts
Mountain Home
Lights Out
Robinson Crusoe
Behold A Pale Horse
Walden
Lord of the Flies
Now for the non fiction reference:
SAS Survival Guide
Mykel Hawkes Green Beret Survival Manual
Bear Grylls Man vs Wild
Les Stroud Survive
Cody Lundin 98 Degrees and When All Hell Breaks Loose
Rawles Survive TEOTWAWKI
Aron Rolston Between a Rock and a Hard Place-127hours
Into the Wild
How to Grow More Veggies....
Encyclopedia of Country Living
Mel Bartholomew Square Foot Gardening
I didnt include the plethora of Military Field Manuals that I have.
I am currently reading Mykle Hawkes book and I think he has the best non fiction book out there. I guess its because I can relate to him more than any of the others. Him and Cody Lundin
But, my point is I have learned so much and combined all of that knowledge into a section of brain matter that makes me valuable. I didnt grow up in the scouts or have the privilege of serving this country and getting the best training that Uncle Sam could give. I have learned just about everything in my life on my own. And in a survival situation, and I am not even talking the End of the World, I think that I am mentally and physically capable of making it and helping others make it. Now in a plane crash in the jungle or a train wreck in the canadian wild probably wont happen in my life but at least I believe in those situations, I would know what to do. I think of what could happen in my every day travels. Going to work and having an accident or going to the mountains and breaking down in a remote area or at the grocery store when someone has a heart attack or even being robbed.
I know what I lack and these books arent going to teach it.
Thats money, accuracy and I guess you could say wild edibles.
I do have a couple of wild edible books that I try and learn from but there is no book for the flora and flauna for the Boondocks.
I also dont watch much TV. When I do its NATGEO, DISC, MILT, Clint Eastwood movies :), and History. I cant get bogged down on what most Americans watch. And I will watch the occasional Braves game (when we arent on an 8 game losing streak after being in first place :mad:.
So in my spare time I am reading. Hell, I am halfway through Mykel Hawkes book and I just started it yesterday (nice when you can put all of the PDF's on your iPhone to read when away from the comp.)
I know a lot of your guys and gals have read most of these books. Did you retain any of the knowledge to help you in situations or in your prepping? I can tell you first hand, if it wasnt for these books and outlets like this forum, I would be eating grass in a field and getting sheered to make a turtleneck.
Wise Owl
As stated in other threads, the characters in most of these books are either already set up or magically come into some money and luck.
I think I have read every one of these books, at least twice. I enjoy them and with small kids, its hard to get out as much and pay for the SuperNintendoGear anymore.
And other than the PAW fiction, what about the survival reference books?
I read, read, research, practice and fail. Then repeat until I get pretty good. Well, acceptable.
So, we have the "magic list" from my library
Alas, Babylon
Patriots
One Second After
Normal and the other parts
Mountain Home
Lights Out
Robinson Crusoe
Behold A Pale Horse
Walden
Lord of the Flies
Now for the non fiction reference:
SAS Survival Guide
Mykel Hawkes Green Beret Survival Manual
Bear Grylls Man vs Wild
Les Stroud Survive
Cody Lundin 98 Degrees and When All Hell Breaks Loose
Rawles Survive TEOTWAWKI
Aron Rolston Between a Rock and a Hard Place-127hours
Into the Wild
How to Grow More Veggies....
Encyclopedia of Country Living
Mel Bartholomew Square Foot Gardening
I didnt include the plethora of Military Field Manuals that I have.
I am currently reading Mykle Hawkes book and I think he has the best non fiction book out there. I guess its because I can relate to him more than any of the others. Him and Cody Lundin
But, my point is I have learned so much and combined all of that knowledge into a section of brain matter that makes me valuable. I didnt grow up in the scouts or have the privilege of serving this country and getting the best training that Uncle Sam could give. I have learned just about everything in my life on my own. And in a survival situation, and I am not even talking the End of the World, I think that I am mentally and physically capable of making it and helping others make it. Now in a plane crash in the jungle or a train wreck in the canadian wild probably wont happen in my life but at least I believe in those situations, I would know what to do. I think of what could happen in my every day travels. Going to work and having an accident or going to the mountains and breaking down in a remote area or at the grocery store when someone has a heart attack or even being robbed.
I know what I lack and these books arent going to teach it.
Thats money, accuracy and I guess you could say wild edibles.
I do have a couple of wild edible books that I try and learn from but there is no book for the flora and flauna for the Boondocks.
I also dont watch much TV. When I do its NATGEO, DISC, MILT, Clint Eastwood movies :), and History. I cant get bogged down on what most Americans watch. And I will watch the occasional Braves game (when we arent on an 8 game losing streak after being in first place :mad:.
So in my spare time I am reading. Hell, I am halfway through Mykel Hawkes book and I just started it yesterday (nice when you can put all of the PDF's on your iPhone to read when away from the comp.)
I know a lot of your guys and gals have read most of these books. Did you retain any of the knowledge to help you in situations or in your prepping? I can tell you first hand, if it wasnt for these books and outlets like this forum, I would be eating grass in a field and getting sheered to make a turtleneck.
Wise Owl
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