 Hey guys, Dylan Schumacher with Savel Defence, and today's book is The American Rifleman, Born of Armed Rebellion by Reed Hendricks. I just finished this book a couple days ago, it is the second book that I know of by Reed Hendricks and the second book of his that I have therefore read. I am a fan of it, a fan of Reed Hendricks in general, and I like this book, I would recommend you reading this book. If you just took this book, if you knew nothing about rifle, or even if you know a lot about rifle, and you just took this book and you read it and you did everything in here, you would be well ahead of the game. There is intelligence in this book, there is some wisdom in this book. My only knock on it, my biggest knock on it is that, Reed, buddy, we got to get you an editor. It's a little jumbled in its content, some of the proofreading is a little spotty. I know knock on it, because if I were to write a book, my proofreading would be just as poor. So if not worse. But big fan of this book, the front part of it talks about legal considerations, mindset stuff, which is pretty similar to a lot of stuff it talks about in this pistol book. If you've read that, which if you haven't, I did a review on that book, you should read that book as well. Then he goes into operating the rifle, he primarily talks about the AR platform, talks about the AK platform, but a lot of it comes down to the AR platform for specifics, which makes sense. It's the greatest intermediate cartridge rifle in the world. Not that you could take this and apply it to any rifle that you're going to run, right? Any tactical style rifle that you're going to run, or maybe probably even a bolt gun, if you're really just going to run it in a way that matters. So goes through all the stuff, reloads, shooting, drills, stances, positions, all the stuff that you need to know to shoot a rifle, basically from zero to 100. As a supplement to or primer to training is really how I view books like this. They're not a substitute. Obviously, no trainer would tell you that their book is a substitute. But it's a primer. It kind of stirs the pot a little bit and gets it started and or it's a supplement. It's other things for you to consider, practice, learn, think about. So big fan of the book would recommend it to you. The back part, he talks about the importance of America and liberty, which is fantastic. And then he has several interviews with people like Paul Howell and Steve Miller and there's a Clint something or other in here, not Clint Smith. Chuck Taylor, maybe that's what I was thinking of. But, which are interesting, I enjoyed those interviews, I would recommend you read through all of those as well. There's just different perspectives and different knowledge from different people who've been doing this for a while. Highly recommend Reed's book. If you haven't read it already, go ahead and get yourself a copy, read it. I don't know Reed or anything, I just really like his book. Do brave deeds and endure.