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38 Works 2,431 Members 15 Reviews

About the Author

Bradford Angier is a seasoned outdoorsman who has lived in many types of wilderness. He is the author of many books on the outdoors, including At Home in the Wilderness, Wilderness Cookery and The Field Guide to Edible Wild Plants. (Bowker Author Biography)

Works by Bradford Angier

Field Guide to Edible Wild Plants (1974) 295 copies, 1 review
Field Guide to Medicinal Wild Plants (1978) 125 copies, 1 review
Skills for Taming the Wilds (1972) 90 copies
Survival With Style (1972) 72 copies, 1 review
At Home in the Woods (1971) 59 copies, 2 reviews
Wilderness Wife (1976) 38 copies, 1 review
The Art and Science of Taking to the Woods (1970) 37 copies, 1 review
Wilderness cookery (1963) 28 copies
Free for the eating (1966) 28 copies

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Reviews

Seventeen-year-old Robbie Benson finds life very difficult despite his new Fiat and wealthy background until he uncovers some interesting facts about the father who deserted him when he was five
½
 
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LynneQuan | Jul 10, 2024 |
This was a spellbinding book about a period of living in the Canadian wilderness that I remember from reading 40 or so years ago.
 
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JBGUSA | 1 other review | Jan 2, 2023 |
When I was young, several years ago, and an avid hiker, climber, and backpacker, this book was an integral part of my essential gear. Highly recommended for anyone spending time in the back country.
1 vote
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awisdom01 | 3 other reviews | Jul 28, 2021 |
Remember reading something by Bradford Angier about fifty years ago, so this mostly cherry, if musty-smelling, first edition of WILDERNESS WIFE (1976) caught my eye in a thrift store. Plenty here about wilderness living on the Peace River in remote British Columbia, where the Angiers built a cabin and set up housekeeping with their Irish wolfhound, Bushman, and a couple horses. Detailed descriptions of foraging for food and hunting moose and encounters with wolf packs and grizzly bears, not to mention arctic temps of 60-70 degrees below zero. Angier wrote many books like this back in the 60s and 70s, some of them enormously popular, mostly with hunters and outdoorsy types. This one is somewhat marred, I thought, by interspersed attempts at poetic flights of fancy about the magical beauty of nature, probably his wife's contribution to an otherwise solid narrative. It's a good enough book, I suppose, and even seems rather relevant again, in light of the global warming crisis and man's continuing destruction of the wilderness. But after fifty pages or so, I grew bored with the book, skimmed as many more pages and finally put it aside. An actual outdoorsman would probably enjoy this a lot more than I did. Musty attic smell to these pages - pee-yew. Better go wash my hands.

- Tim Bazzett, author of the memoir, BOOKLOVER
… (more)
 
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TimBazzett | Feb 12, 2020 |

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Statistics

Works
38
Members
2,431
Popularity
#10,557
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
15
ISBNs
98
Languages
1

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