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America's Best Selling Tanning Guide. Over 165 photographs and
illustrations bring you step-by-step from raw skin to velvety soft
buckskin and then show you how to create beautiful garments and
useful goods. You will also learn how to make rawhide and hide
glue, tan in a wilderness setting and the best way to skin.
History, humour and science make this book not only practical, but
fun! Designed to be easily understood by the beginner yet rich with
details for the experienced, this book teaches tanning as a natural
process. No chemicals are needed! All the tools and materials are
waiting around your home and land. While the tools are simple,
having a great method is the key. This book has that method (see
the following reviews). Buckskin is durable, soft, washable and
warm. A hand-made garment for people all over the world for
millennia, it breathes and stretches with your body, cuts the wind
and won't tear on briars. It is excellent to wear hiking, hunting
or around the house. Plus you don't need to hunt.
When Freddie Mercury died in 1991, aged just 45, the world was
rocked by the vibrant and flamboyant star's tragic secret that he
had been battling AIDS. The announcement of his diagnosis reached
them less than 24-hours before his death, shocking his millions of
fans, and fully opening the eyes of the world to the destructive
and fatal disease. In Somebody to Love, biographers Mark Langthorne
and Matt Richards skilfully weave Freddie's pursuit of musical
greatness with Queen, his upbringing and endless search for love,
with the origins and aftermath of a terrible disease that swept
across the world in the 1980s. With brand new perspectives from
Freddie's closest friends and fellow musicians, this unique and
deeply moving tribute casts a very different light on his death. An
intimate read, like Freddie and his art, it will stay with you for
a long time to come.
Almost seventy-five years ago, MI9 dreamt up the most audacious
escape and evasion plan of World War Two. Formulated by Airey
Neave, one of the first men ever to escape from Colditz, this plan
was one of subterfuge, concealment and deception on a scale never
seen before. With numerous downed RAF and Allied pilots on the run
in Europe and with the fabled Comete Escape Line having been
infiltrated by double agents, Neave's plan was to hide these men
right under the very noses of the Nazis rather than risk
repatriation. Choosing a forest in the heart of France, right next
to one of the German Army's largest ammunition bases, Neave,
Belgian agents and the French Resistance would secretly transport
and hide Allied pilots and soldiers within feet of the enemy.
Nobody thought it would work, but such was the success of the
secret camp that a whole community of over one hundred and fifty
Allied escapers lived within the forest for three months in the
run-up to D-Day. Despite numerous close shaves, they were never
discovered and this outrageous plan, brilliant in its simplicity,
saw the Allied evaders make their home in the forest, cooking and
hunting to survive - and even setting up a golf course in the
forest using branches for clubs - without discovery. This operation
remained absolutely secret, to the point that the inhabitants of
the villages surrounding the forest were unaware, until the end, of
the existence of that allied force so close to them. Told through
interviews with evaders, members of the Resistance and the children
charged with smuggling food into the forest, this book tells the
compelling story of one of the most audacious operations in World
War Two. A story that has, until today, remained as secret as the
Hidden Army of Freteval.
Almost seventy-five years ago, MI9 dreamt up the most audacious
escape and evasion plan of World War Two. Formulated by Airey
Neave, one of the first men ever to escape from Colditz, this plan
was one of subterfuge, concealment and deception on a scale never
seen before. With numerous downed RAF and Allied pilots on the run
in Europe and with the fabled Comete Escape Line having been
infiltrated by double agents, Neave's plan was to hide these men
right under the very noses of the Nazis rather than risk
repatriation. Choosing a forest in the heart of France, right next
to one of the German Army's largest ammunition bases, Neave,
Belgian agents and the French Resistance would secretly transport
and hide Allied pilots and soldiers within feet of the enemy.
Nobody thought it would work, but such was the success of the
secret camp that a whole community of over one hundred and fifty
Allied escapers lived within the forest for three months in the
run-up to D-Day. Despite numerous close shaves, they were never
discovered and this outrageous plan, brilliant in its simplicity,
saw the Allied evaders make their home in the forest, cooking and
hunting to survive - and even setting up a golf course in the
forest using branches for clubs - without discovery. This operation
remained absolutely secret, to the point that the inhabitants of
the villages surrounding the forest were unaware, until the end, of
the existence of that allied force so close to them. Told through
interviews with evaders, members of the Resistance and the children
charged with smuggling food into the forest, this book tells the
compelling story of one of the most audacious operations in World
War Two. A story that has, until today, remained as secret as the
Hidden Army of Freteval.
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