






"It is a superb reference book, better than any number of those that pretend to teach you survival skills by concentrating on just a few crafts." - Survival Tomorrow
"This is really an encylopedia and, like a good encyclopedia, the narrative is clear and complete, the illustrations are plentiful and the whole thing is thoroughly indexed. You can spend a fortune on a library of neo-pioneer books or you can buy "BACK TO BASICS" - Times & World News, Roanoke, Va.
"If you're going to go back to the good old days you'll need some the good old days didn't have...an instruction manual." - Cincinnati Enquirer
"Open the book at any page and there's something of interest." - Chicago Sun-Times
"...it would be an asset to anyone's personal library at home. We recommend it highly." - Kansas City TimesFrom the Introduction:
"Back To Basics is a book about the simple life. It is about old-fashioned ways of doing things, and old-fashioned craftsmanship, and old-fashioned food, and old-fashioned fun. It is also about independence - the kind of down-home self-reliance that our grandparents and great grandparents took for granted, and that we moderns often think has vanished forever, along with supermarket tomatoes that taste good, packaged bread that does not have additives, and holidays that are not commercialized.In a period of increasing terrorism, war, and oil and gasoline prices, with the disruptions, shortages, and inflation which are likely to result, that last paragraph reminds us that we may all have an increasing need for improved personal survival, budgetary, and independent-living skills over the next few years! This is an essential book that anyone concerned with saving money and with deveoping practical living-skills must have.At its heart Back To Basics is a how-to book packed with hundreds of projects, step-by-step sequences, charts, tables, diagrams, and illustrations to help you and your family reestablish control over your day-to-day lives. The book is organized into six main sections. The first deals with shelter, the second with energy, the third with raising food, the forth with preserving food, the fifth with home crafts, and the sixth with recreation.The subjects presented lead in logical sequence along the way stations on the road to self-sufficiency. An added feature, "Sources and Resources," lists suggestions for further reading plus names of suppliers of hard-to-find equipment.
Practical, useful information is provided on just about every skill and handicraft under the sun. You will learn how to make your own cheese, raise your own chickens, harvest your own honey, generate your own electricity, and brew your own applejack. You will be able to try your hand at blacksmithing, broom-making, and stone masonry. You will discover how to make soap, tan a hide, build an igloo, heat with wood, smoke a salmon, and create your own cosmetics. Some projects are difficult and demanding - building a log cabin or installing a solar water heating system are tasks for someone with experience, skill, and a strong back. But most of the jobs are well within the capabilities of the average person, and many are suited for family participation, especially for the kids.
While Back To Basics is a book for doing, it is also a book for dreaming. There is no need to run out and start baking adobe bricks in order to enjoy learning the ins and outs of adobe construction. [It might even set you thinking about putting up your own adobe home someday]. Similarly, your imagination is apt to be fired by the interviews with folks around the country who are already practicing the skills and crafts described in Back To Basics. Among others, you will hear from a husband-and-wife team who built a log cabin in Alaska, some suburban kids who raise goats and pigs in their backyard, a city worker who specializes in urban gardening, and a New Hampshire artisan who is keeping alive the Indian art of building birchbark canoes. There are also descriptions of by-gone ways of doing things: the technique of pitsawing, the Indian way of smoking a deer hide and making jerky, the inner workings of a water-powered gristmill. These - along with the historical background of each skill and charming old prints that illustrate many of them - make for fascinating reading.
Americans are a contradictory people. No nation has ever moved further from the harsh realities of wilderness existence. Yet. paradoxically, no nation has clung more tenaciously to its early ideals - to the concept of personal independence, to the mystique of the frontier, to the early pioneers' sense of rugged self-reliance. It is as if somewhere, deep in the American spirit, there has always lurked a distrust of the very technology that we, more than any other people, have spawned. Perhaps this distrust was an accident, but perhaps it was fate; for in the light of recent events that have called into question our easy dependence on modern technology, it seems to have been prophetic. Americans have long yearned for a return to basics; now, suddenly, it has become a necessity. Back To Basics can do much to guide the way."
This is an absolutely essential book if you wish to increase your self-reliance and personal survival skills, as well as provide yourself with an essential reference and how-to resource in preparation for the coming oil-induced disruptions and shortages. We urge you to order your own copy quickly to be sure of obtaining one! This is an ideal companion to the equally-essential, bestselling "ENCYCLOPEDIA OF COUNTRY LIVING".
Take this opportunity to add the superb, comprehensive, and invaluable "BACK TO BASICS: How To Learn And Enjoy Traditional American Skills" to your survival, independent-living, or home library!
Large hardback; 456 pages


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"The SAS Survival Handbook: How to Survive in the Wild, in Any Climate, on Land or at Sea" - John Wiseman [Note: this is the US edition; the British edition is shown above - the contents are the same in both editions, only the covers and sizes differ]
"The Complete Wilderness Training Book" - Hugh McManners
"Camping And Woodcraft" - Horace Kephart
"Wilderness Living" - Gregory J. Davenport
"Wilderness Survival" - Gregory J. Davenport
"Primitive Wilderness Living and Survival Skills: Naked into the Wilderness" - John McPherson and Geri McPherson
"Primitive Wilderness Skills, Applied And Advanced" - John McPherson and Geri McPherson
"Primitive Technology: A Book of Earth Skills" - David Wescott, Society of Primitive Technology
"Primitive Technology II: Ancestral Skills from the Society of Primitive Technology" - edited by David Wescott, Society of Primitive Technology
"Participating in Nature: Thomas J. Elpel's Field Guide to Primitive Living Skills" - Thomas J. Elpel
"Making Arrows the Old Way" - Doug Wallentine
"Old Tools, New Eyes: A Primal Primer of Flintknapping
" - Bob Patten and Richard Jagoda
"Early Hunting Tools: An Introduction to Flintknapping" - Matt Gravelle
"Flintknapping" - Paul Hellweg
"Flintknapping: Making and Understanding Stone Tools" - John C. Whittaker
"Earth Knack: Stone Age Skills for the 21st Century" - John C. Whittaker
"US Army Survival Manual: FM 21-76" - Department of Defense
"How To Survive On Land And Sea" - Frank C. Craighead
"Aboman's Guide to Survival And Self-Reliance: Practical Skills for Interesting Times" - Joseph A. Bigley
"Practical Outdoor Survival: A Modern Approach" - Len McDougall
"Identifying and Harvesting Edible and Medicinal Plants" - Steve Brill
"Field Guide to Edible Wild Plants" - Bradford Angier
"Edible Wild Plants" - Thomas S. Elias, Peter A. Dykeman
"Tom Brown's Guide to Wild Edible and Medicinal Plants" - Tom Brown, Jr