wheresalice reviewed Feral Self-Care by Mandi Em
None
4 stars
I already do some form of a lot of these, but it's a good reminder, and I feel like the world would be a better place if more people engaged their feral side like this
Long time Linux user. Bicycle, train, boat and bus rider. Fan of silly music I can dance to.
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I already do some form of a lot of these, but it's a good reminder, and I feel like the world would be a better place if more people engaged their feral side like this
The first 80% of the book is great, then you realise the author is a self-centered Instagram influencer and it taints the story. It's a decent read, but go elsewhere to hear about dirtbags and vagabonds who care about the wider community.
Embrace your inner goblin! Learn to decorate, dress, craft, forage, and live according to the goblin principles of community, diversity, …
This isn't far off the type of travel book that I'd write if I had the writing skills and slightly more experience. A fantastic short book about the journey rather than the destination
I came into this only knowing the title, so it was a surprise just how much religion was in this book. But the points it makes are still valid whether you are a believer or not
I was expecting interesting stories from the golden age of dumpster diving. Instead it's a ver y out of date guide that is now pretty useless.
The one rule of dumpster diving was to never do it for profit, and yet the author openly discusses both taking items to sell and writing this book entirely for profit. You don't take things you don't need, and you help others where you can (without charging them)