FEB
18
Review of “Urban Survival Guide: Learn The Secrets Of Urban Survival To Keep You Alive After Man-Made Disasters, Natural Disasters, and Breakdowns In Civil Order”
By:

There aren’t too many books I buy where you get the oppor­tu­ni­ty to sit down to read them, and they are exact­ly what I was look­ing for.  How­ev­er, in David Mor­ris’s book “Urban Sur­vival Guide: Learn The Secrets Of Urban Sur­vival To Keep You Alive After Man-Made Dis­as­ters, Nat­ur­al Dis­as­ters, and Break­downs In Civ­il Order ,” that is exact­ly what I got, and more.  As many of you know I live just out­side NYC.  You prob­a­bly are sick of hear­ing me say that.  What that has done for me is give me the oppor­tu­ni­ty to be very crit­i­cal of what is hap­pen­ing around me, and think deeply about how I am going to act or react to a sit­u­a­tion that may occur.  David Mor­ris, has gone a step fur­ther in this book.  He has inter­viewed dozens of experts on a miri­ad of pos­si­bil­i­ties, and has laid out a plan that can help you to seri­ous­ly kick start your plans to either Bug In or Bug Out based on your own per­son­al sit­u­a­tion.  I drew many par­al­lels out of this book, but clear­ly David has years on me when it comes to assess­ing the sit­u­a­tions, and prepar­ing for them.  The book is actu­al­ly a 12 week course that David sells online called   Sur­vive In Place .  If the book par­al­lels the course, then there is a lot of infor­ma­tion there.

This is a no non­sense guide and plan.  David gets right to the point regard­ing every aspect of get­ting ready to Bug Out or Bug In.  There is very lit­tle fluff, and uses real life exam­ples of dis­as­ters such as Kat­ri­na with specifics as to why peo­ple should have got­ten out ear­li­er, and what you should be aware of if you are ever going to be in the same or sim­i­lar sit­u­a­tion.  I think this was writ­ten before the Earth­quake in Haiti or I am sure there would have been ref­er­ences in there to that dis­as­ter as well.  There is a com­pre­hen­sive resources sec­tion as well as URLs for you to go to his Web­site to see addi­tion­al con­tent, exam­ples, and updates around the infor­ma­tion writ­ten in the book.

This book cov­ers every­thing from your own san­i­ty gut check to “Hard­en­ing Your Home” which is a whole chap­ter in the book.  Do not expect very detailed infor­ma­tion on how to add met­al bars or sheet­ing to pro­tect win­dows how­ev­er.  Expect the high lev­el infor­ma­tion to be there so that you may take the steps to look into doing what you have to do for you or your fam­i­ly.  The fact that Mor­ris brings the infor­ma­tion up and points to it should be enough for you to inves­ti­gate, if you have not already.  Oth­er­wise this would be 1000 plus page book.

The book does come with work sheets that you can repli­cate on your PC to help you to plan and improve your skill set(s).  There was even a skills assess­ment sheet to help you to assess where you, your fam­i­ly, and / or your sur­vival group need to improve on.  Need­less to say, I need a lot of skills improve­ment.  Those sec­tions will help you to pri­or­i­tize what is impor­tant to you.

There is no gun talk, or very lit­tle, which was fine with me, because every­one has their own opin­ions, and it is clear David Mor­ris knows this.  I was hap­py to see there was lit­tle gun talk as there are more impor­tant top­ics to be dis­cussed.

This book is an easy read, as it reads quick­ly, is not over com­pli­cat­ed, and is just chock full of infor­ma­tion for the urban and sub­ur­ban prep­per / sur­vival­ist.  I am going to go out on a limb and say that if you are in prep mode at all, you need to get your hands on this book to help take you to the next lev­el.  You may only find that this solid­i­fies your thought process, but it is always good to know there are oth­er like minds out there.

I had been look­ing at this book for a long time going back and forth about pur­chas­ing it.  I am glad I did.  In fact, I bought it on the Kin­dle plat­form, and now will prob­a­bly go back and buy it in paper­back so I have it to mark up and make notes in, as well as throw in my Bug Out Bag with me. And, the fact that I will buy any book twice with a close to $25.00 price tag says a lot.

Here is the book on Ama­zon:   http://goo.gl/90NOf .  I think you will find it is well worth read­ing.

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6
COMMENTS
By: MasterPo
feb
21

In reply to suburban .

Maybe I was too harsh when I said I don’t agree.

More like that I would want to ask the author more specifics about WHY he believes this or that way on certain topics. Some of his ideas aren’t so clear to me as to the ‘why’ part.

By: suburban
feb
19

In reply to Jim A .

He covers it, but not in the traditional way. He covers the concept of “sharing” with your neighbors, which is always a highly debated topic. If you are going for long term food storage there are probably better options online, as well as in book form. The book from Dr. Prepper seems to have quite a bit on it, and I am about to start :Living on Wheat.” Not sure if there are storage instructions in there, but I will review the book and let you know when I have it completed.

By: Jim A
feb
19

Thanks for the review. It sounds exactly like what I need.

Does he cover long-term food storage which is what I am going to focus on next?

By: suburban
feb
19

In reply to MasterPo .

Honestly, I thought it was spot on almost all the way through. Maybe it was perspective, and maybe it was what I thought I wanted to hear. But the truth of the matter is that for most of the book, in my opinion, prior and after reading, he knows what he is talking about… Just my 2 cents worth.

By: MasterPo
feb
19

I’ve been meaning to get it. Amazon gives you a 1 chapter preview and it was great! I’d really like to discuss many of the topics with the author (I don’t agree with some of the points). But the book really does make you think of scenarios you may not have considered.

By: Nobody
feb
18

Good review. I’ll probably pick it up now!

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