#184989 - 10/12/09 05:12 AM
Childhood Survival Books
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Member
Registered: 10/01/09
Posts: 184
Loc: Nebraska
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I remember books I read when I was growing up, and the 2 that currently come to mind are My Side of the Mountain & Hatchet. For me during Cub Scouts these were the books that made me think beyond what they showed/taught us during weekly meetings. Even though it is just a read and I have not tested the little things I read since then with inexperience (homemade salt from tree bark) at home, it was a lot of fun.
I looked them both up today and was most excited to see that there is a new How-To companion for MSotM titled Pocket Guide to the Outdoors: Based on My Side of the Mountain
It might be many years later, but I am looking forward to getting it and reliving the air of adventure I once read as a child.
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#185039 - 10/12/09 04:36 PM
Re: Childhood Survival Books
[Re: Blast]
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Member
Registered: 10/01/09
Posts: 184
Loc: Nebraska
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They would be:
The Far Side of the Mountain Frightful's Mountain Frightful's Daughter
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#185124 - 10/13/09 05:56 AM
Re: Childhood Survival Books
[Re: T_Co]
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Member
Registered: 10/05/09
Posts: 165
Loc: Rens. County, NY
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I read The Call of the Wild and Up Front, but I was an odd kid.
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#185144 - 10/13/09 12:40 PM
Re: Childhood Survival Books
[Re: UpstateTom]
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Member
Registered: 10/01/09
Posts: 184
Loc: Nebraska
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Then there's White Fang if your a dog person
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#190454 - 12/11/09 01:07 AM
Re: Childhood Survival Books
[Re: T_Co]
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Enthusiast
Registered: 08/15/03
Posts: 208
Loc: NE Ohio
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Two Little Savages by Ernest Thompson Seton is one of my all-time favorites.
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#193837 - 01/18/10 07:50 PM
Re: Childhood Survival Books
[Re: CANOEDOGS]
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Old Hand
Registered: 06/24/09
Posts: 714
Loc: Kentucky
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Jack London's "To Build a Fire," and Alice Dalgliesh's "The Bears on Hemlock Mountain"
_________________________
Uh ... does anyone have a match?
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#196246 - 02/21/10 12:05 AM
Re: Childhood Survival Books
[Re: ]
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INTERCEPTOR
Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 07/15/02
Posts: 3760
Loc: TX
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The "Hatchet" and the movie version "A Cry in the Wild" got me into the outdoors. I'm currently reading "Hatchet" to my daughters at bedtime, but I skip all the stuff about Brian's parents divorcing. Before that I read them the "My side of the mountain" books which they really liked. -Blast
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#202145 - 05/20/10 04:18 AM
Re: Childhood Survival Books
[Re: Blast]
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Member
Registered: 12/21/04
Posts: 115
Loc: ENGLEWOOD ,TN
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Hatchet is great my 11 yr old had to read it in school and now she has read The River (a sequel) and Brian's Winter (alternate sequel) There's 2 other books about Brian but the names escape me right now.
I also have My side of the Mountain for her to read and will try to find the other companion books to this.
I love reading books so I have no problem buying her books to read especially when I enjoy reading them too
Check out Lost on a Mountain in Maine by Donn Fendler true story of an 11 year old lost on Mt. Katahdin
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#226648 - 06/26/11 12:08 AM
Re: Childhood Survival Books
[Re: T_Co]
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Stranger
Registered: 03/27/09
Posts: 2
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Strange Companion is a book I read as a child. It is about a boy's survival after being the sole survivor of a winter plane crash. I vaguely recall the book and would love to find it to re-read from an adult perspective.
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#240105 - 01/25/12 10:51 PM
Re: Childhood Survival Books
[Re: T_Co]
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Member
Registered: 08/04/11
Posts: 173
Loc: Colonial Heights, VA
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A Light in the Forest about a boy taken by the Delaware and his adventures. I learned how to walk silently from that.
A co-worker is lending me My Side of the Mountain.
_________________________
People don't like to be meddled with. ~River Tam
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#240452 - 02/02/12 09:16 PM
Re: Childhood Survival Books
[Re: T_Co]
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Member
Registered: 12/22/06
Posts: 170
Loc: harrisburg, pa
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There's one I've been looking for that I cannot recall the name of - it involves a young couple driving into a snow drift and getting stuck, then having to get to safety many days later. I read it probably 20 some years ago and I can't recall the name of it. Anyone know it perchance?
_________________________
Owner, Messina's Front Line Survival Gear - visit our website at www.flsgear.com! Blog: flsgear.wordpress.com Twitter: twitter.com/flsgear Facebook: http://on.fb.me/foPFgx
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#240459 - 02/03/12 12:22 AM
Re: Childhood Survival Books
[Re: T_Co]
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Crazy Canuck
Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 02/03/07
Posts: 3240
Loc: Alberta, Canada
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From very early years, I vaguely recall a Winnie-the-Pooh hardcover that had Christopher Robin with a raft and lantern, in a flood or rainstorm. I have no idea what the title was, but I have a few mental snapshots of the illustrations. And I still remember the thrill that story gave me, how it fired my interest and imagination.
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#240465 - 02/03/12 03:36 AM
Re: Childhood Survival Books
[Re: T_Co]
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Old Hand
Registered: 02/11/10
Posts: 778
Loc: Los Angeles, CA
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2 Adventure books I loved as a kid-The Island of the blue dolphins & The Cay,Lotsa' Good survival info infused into the neurons,Way back when!
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#243000 - 03/12/12 05:56 PM
Re: Childhood Survival Books
[Re: T_Co]
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Veteran
Registered: 08/31/11
Posts: 1233
Loc: Alaska
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My favorites were a series of novels for boys by Montgomery Atwater. They were about forest rangers, ski patrolers, and whatnot. As a young lad, I devoured every one of the series that our local library had available. Two I remember were "Hank Winton: Smokechaser", and "Ski Patrol".
Atwater knew what he wrote about. After service with the 10th Mountain Division in WWII, he went to work for the US Forest Service. He established the first formal avalanche research program in the Western Hemisphere, at Alta Utah, in 1945.
_________________________
"Toto, I've a feeling we're not in Kansas any more." -Dorothy, in The Wizard of Oz
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#247924 - 07/03/12 07:21 PM
Re: Childhood Survival Books
[Re: garland]
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Member
Registered: 12/22/06
Posts: 170
Loc: harrisburg, pa
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_________________________
Owner, Messina's Front Line Survival Gear - visit our website at www.flsgear.com! Blog: flsgear.wordpress.com Twitter: twitter.com/flsgear Facebook: http://on.fb.me/foPFgx
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#261486 - 06/25/13 05:55 PM
Re: Childhood Survival Books
[Re: T_Co]
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Lilly
Unregistered
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Nice memories about childhood and nice lessons were learned at that time. There are many thing that looks foolish at that time when elders told to do so. But after spending a span of life, many realities come to known us, they have told that thing for our beneficial future life.
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#261492 - 06/26/13 01:43 AM
Re: Childhood Survival Books
[Re: T_Co]
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Old Hand
Registered: 10/19/06
Posts: 1013
Loc: Pacific NW, USA
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Jerry Todd Pirate Jerry Todd and the Oak Island Treasure
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#261503 - 06/26/13 12:25 PM
Re: Childhood Survival Books
[Re: Lono]
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Old Hand
Registered: 11/09/06
Posts: 870
Loc: wellington, fl
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Tunnel in the sky, Farnham's freehold by Robert Heinlein
_________________________
Dance like you have never been hurt, work like no one is watching,love like you don't need the money.
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#273268 - 12/14/14 08:04 PM
Re: Childhood Survival Books
[Re: nursemike]
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Addict
Registered: 07/04/02
Posts: 436
Loc: Florida
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Seconding Bacpacjac's nomination and adding "Alas Babylon" by Pat Frank (came out in 70's?). Wasn't really a childhood book, but it made me think.
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#273280 - 12/16/14 06:17 AM
Re: Childhood Survival Books
[Re: T_Co]
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Newbie
Registered: 02/25/07
Posts: 45
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The Golden book of Camping and Camp Crafts is top of my list. National Audubon Society Field Guides to Insects and spiders, Reptiles, birds, trees. Those were my go to books to browse while eating lunch during summer vacation. For fiction Julie of the Wolves by Jean Craighead George was my favorite. She does it right. Z for Zachariah by Robert C. O'Brien. Also Journey Outside by Mary Q. Steele. They are good because they make a point of the main characters survival skills both practical and mental.
Those are what come to mind right know. I'll probably remember others
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#273302 - 12/18/14 03:54 AM
Re: Childhood Survival Books
[Re: T_Co]
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Old Hand
Registered: 05/29/10
Posts: 863
Loc: Southern California
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Hatchet by Gary Paulson Z is for Zacharia by Robert O'Brien Trouble River by Betsy Myers (not really a survival book so much as a don't underestimate what you can accomplish with courage and elbow grease)
_________________________
Hope for the best and prepare for the worst.
The object in life is not to be on the side of the majority, but to escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane
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#273305 - 12/18/14 04:48 PM
Re: Childhood Survival Books
[Re: T_Co]
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Old Hand
Registered: 03/19/05
Posts: 1185
Loc: Channeled Scablands
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Non-fiction: http://www.amazon.com/Alaskan-Yukon-Trophies-Won-Lost/dp/1879356678Excellent read. Traversing glaciers on horseback, Sawing planks to build a boat to float a whitewater river, walking 30 miles a day as winter sets in Alaska after losing their gear on the boat. http://www.amazon.com/Three-Against-Wilderness-Classics-Collection/dp/1894898540"Eric Collier's riveting recollections about the 26 years that he, his wife Lillian and son Veasy spent homesteading in the isolated Chilcotin wilderness made for an international bestseller and one of the most famous books ever written about British Columbia. http://www.amazon.com/Diary-Early-American-Boy-Americana/dp/0486436667"This reprint of an actual early-nineteenth-century diary provides today's readers with a delightful rarity. Eric Sloane has taken a fifteen-year-old farm boy's brief, concise notebook and expanded the daily entries with explanatory narrative and his own remarkable drawings. As a result, he has preserved the simplicity and charm of a bygone era." http://www.amazon.com/The-Arctic-year-Peter-Freuchen/dp/B0007IZCNK#customerReviewsDry but information you won't find elsewhere "This book was published in 1958. It contains 12 chapters, one for each month of the year, starting with January and ending with December. In each chapter the authors explain what "happens" in the Arctic during that month: what happens to the winds, waves, water, ice, the plants, the animals, and so on. Maps and line drawings accompany each chapter. I found the book very informative for what the Arctic year was like 50 years ago. With global warming, I'm not sure this book would be accurate today. Still, it's very worth reading or consulting."
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#273339 - 12/22/14 12:16 AM
Re: Childhood Survival Books
[Re: clearwater]
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Geezer in Chief
Geezer
Registered: 08/26/06
Posts: 7705
Loc: southern Cal
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Asa kid, I followed the historical exploits of Dan'l B and Davy C and all those guys. Later I found the annual publication[/u]Accidents in North American Mountaineering[u][/u], and [u]The Survival Book[u][/u] by Nesbitt, Pond, and Allen to be quite informative. The latter, written in 1959, still contains useful information, although parts are charmingly obsolete (back pressure, arm lift resuscitation, anyone?)
_________________________
Geezer in Chief
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#283156 - 12/29/16 04:29 PM
Re: Childhood Survival Books
[Re: T_Co]
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Enthusiast
Registered: 06/18/06
Posts: 358
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Alas Babylon was re-issued in recent years. It is among the best of the survivalist fiction. Especially convincing because it's not overtly political or racist. But I would think that you need to be a fairly serious kid to read it any younger than 16.
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