by Richard Middleton
Catapults, Crossbows, Blowguns, Bullet-Bows and Airguns
This book explores in practical detail many of the
ways, old and new, in which people can shoot bullets by their own force, without
the aid of explosives.
David slew Goliath with a stone from a sling, but
it was a large stone and Man has long been shooting small stones and carefully rounded
bullets of clay, glass - and latterly steel and lead - from a variety of weapons
without recourse to gunpowder. The bow and arrow has been Man's choice for
the last 10,000 years, when modern firearms have been unavailable or unsuitable.
There is currently an explosion of interest in making
primitive archery equipment. The author has been building bows and shooting
flint-tipped arrows since adolescence. But the addiction has led to stronger
stuff: to experiments with making and shooting pump-up airguns, stonebows and home-made
lead musket balls.
Middleton's narrative is lively, humorous and full
of exciting information and experimentation.
In this quirky and clever book, he invites you to
share the thrills of his garden shed experiments.
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About the Author:
Born in Australia, educated in England, Richard Middleton is a member
of the Society of Archery Antiquaries and now lives in New Zealand.
His wife, who edit out all the vainglorious
bits of the above biography (which is why it is now so short), has declined
(refused point-blank) to have this book dedicated to her, and only wishes
it recorded that she is a saint for putting up with all these activities.
Though his interest always returns to
the simple catapult, over the last 30 years he has made countless bows,
crossbows, and even airguns to study the velocity and trajectory patterns
of their missiles. He likes to test thing for himself rather than
to believe handed-down orthodoxies - an attitude not without its costs,
some might add.
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Hardcover,
256 pages; 7-1/2'' x 10''
50 B&W
Illustrations
ISBN 0-0-8117-0156-3