I have a shortwave receiver which is version of the Kaito Electronic Inc,
Tecsun Digital PL368 AM/FM/LW/SW Worldband Radio with Single Side Band The #1 reason I like this radio is that it's small enough to store in a shielded can. #2 is that it can be recharged via either a USB charging cable or you can remove the battery and charge it outside the radio. I have spare batteries so can go either way.
Receiver bands:
-FM: 64.0 – 108 MHz (4 ranges selectable)
-AM: 520 – 1710 kHz (Tuning step 9/10 KHz selectable)
-LW: 153 KHz to 513 KHz
-SW: 1711 HHz to 29999 KHz
I use it primarily for
AM broadcast. It has an internal AM antenna but it also has an AM antenna jack on the top of the radio and a removable external coil antenna which rotates. That small antenna is able to reduce noise and clean up an AM signal quite well by simply rotating to align with the strongest/cleanest signal.
A shortwave long wire antenna clips to the FM antenna if you prefer SW.
FM broadcast is very local, but while some AM stations I've heard are in the state, they aren't necessarily local; AM Clear-Channel stations have lots of power and can have very long range. The SW I've received here seems irrelevant to any emergency and receiving is too dependent on skywaves and such. IMO it's not reliable enough and AM is a better option.
Do a google on "North American ClearChannel AM Radio Stations" and one of the links you'll find is at wikipedia --
Clear-channel_station That wiki-page has a list of "Class A (former I-A/I-B) stations". Since in an emergency the internet may not be available, I compiled station data from different sources (including wiki) and have it stored on my laptop and tablets. I can recharge all electronics using solar panels and power banks.
Transceivers here are all GMRS. I recommend you get a licence, easy and not expensive. It's another good to have option; better to have and not need.
FYI: I did a post about portable solar panels so yeah, I also recommend solar to recharge small devices. YMMV