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The Dangerous Book for Boys

The Dangerous Book for BoysAuthors: Conn Iggulden, Hal Iggulden
Brand: Harper Collins Publishers
Category: Book

List Price: $26.95
Buy Used: $2.84
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New (81) Used (119) Collectible (3) from $2.84

Seller: goodwill-discount-books
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 693 reviews
Sales Rank: 808

Media: Hardcover
Pages: 270
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.3
Dimensions (in): 9.8 x 7.7 x 1.1

MPN: 9780061243585
ISBN: 0061243582
Dewey Decimal Number: 031.02
EAN: 9780061243585
ASIN: 0061243582

Publication Date: May 1, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - The Dangerous Book for Boys
  • Hardcover - The Dangerous Book for Boys (Signed!)
  • Hardcover - The Dangerous Book for Boys
  • Hardcover - The Dangerous Book for Boys (Hardcover)
  • Audio CD - The Dangerous Book for Boys CD
  • Hardcover - The Dangerous Book for Boys
  • Hardcover - The Dangerous Book for Boys
  • Hardcover - The Dangerous Book for Boys
  • Hardcover - The Dangerous Book For Boys
  • Hardcover - Dangerous Book for Boys
  • Calendar - The Dangerous Book for Boys: 2009 Day-to-Day Calendar
  • Audible Audio Edition - The Dangerous Book for Boys
  • Audio CD - The Dangerous Book for Boys CD

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
The bestselling book for every boy from eight to eighty, covering essential boyhood skills such as building tree houses, learning how to fish, finding true north, and even answering the age old question of what the big deal with girls is. In this digital age there is still a place for knots, skimming stones and stories of incredible courage. This book recaptures Sunday afternoons, stimulates curiosity, and makes for great father-son activities. The brothers Conn and Hal have put together a wonderful collection of all things that make being young or young at heart fun 151 building go-carts and electromagnets, identifying insects and spiders, and flying the world s best paper airplanes. Publisher: HarperCollins Author: Conn Iggulden, Hal IgguldenAges: 18 and up Format: 288 pages, hardcoverISBN: 9780061243585

Amazon.com Review
Equal parts droll and gorgeous nostalgia book and heartfelt plea for a renewed sense of adventure in the lives of boys and men, Conn and Hal Iggulden's The Dangerous Book for Boys became a mammoth bestseller in the United Kingdom in 2006. Adapted, in moderation, for American customs in this edition (cricket is gone, rugby remains; conkers are out, Navajo Code Talkers in), The Dangerous Book is a guide book for dads as well as their sons, as a reminder of lore and technique that have not yet been completely lost to the digital age. Recall the adventures of Scott of the Antarctic and the Battle of the Somme, relearn how to palm a coin, tan a skin, and, most charmingly, wrap a package in brown paper and string. The book's ambitions are both modest and winningly optimistic: you get the sense that by learning how to place a splint or write in invisible ink, a boy might be prepared for anything, even girls (which warrant a small but wise chapter of their own).

Inside The Dangerous Book for Boys


Figure 8 Knot

Sheet Bend Knot


The Battle of Waterloo

Questions for Conn Iggulden

Conn and Hal Iggulden are two brothers who have not forgotten what it was like to be boys. Conn taught for many years before becoming one of the most admired and popular young historical novelists with his Emperor series, based on the life of Julius Caesar, and his newly embarked series on Genghis Khan, while Hal is a theater director. We asked Conn about their collaboration.

Amazon.com: It's difficult to describe what a phenomenon The Dangerous Book for Boys was in the UK last year. When I would check the bestseller list on our sister site, Amazon.co.uk, there would be, along with your book, which spent much of the year at the top of the list, a half-dozen apparent knockoff books of similar boy knowledge. Clearly, you tapped into something big. What do you think it was?

Iggulden: In a word, fathers. I am one myself and I think we've become aware that the whole "health and safety" overprotective culture isn't doing our sons any favors. Boys need to learn about risk. They need to fall off things occasionally, or--and this is the important bit--they'll take worse risks on their own. If we do away with challenging playgrounds and cancel school trips for fear of being sued, we don't end up with safer boys--we end up with them walking on train tracks. In the long run, it's not safe at all to keep our boys in the house with a Playstation. It's not good for their health or their safety.

You only have to push a boy on a swing to see how much enjoys the thrill of danger. It's hard-wired. Remove any opportunity to test his courage and they'll find ways to test themselves that will be seriously dangerous for everyone around them. I think of it like playing the lottery--someone has to say "Look, you won't win--and your children won't be hurt. Relax. It won't be you."

I think that's the core of the book's success. It isn't just a collection of things to do. The heroic stories alone are something we haven't had for too long. It isn't about climbing Everest, but it is an attitude, a philosophy for fathers and sons. Our institutions are too wrapped up in terror over being sued--so we have to do things with them ourselves. This book isn't a bad place to start.

As for knockoff books--great. They'll give my son something to read that doesn't involve him learning a dull moral lesson of some kind--just enjoying an adventure or learning skills and crafts so that he has a feeling of competence and confidence--just as we have.

Amazon.com: You made some changes for the U.S. edition, and I for one am sorry that you have removed the section on conkers, if only because it's such a lovely and mysterious word. What are (or what is) conkers?

Iggulden: Horse chestnuts strung on a shoelace and knocked against one another until they shatter. In the entire history of the world, no one has ever been hurt by a conker, but it's still been banned by some British schools, just in case. Another school banned paper airplanes. Honestly, it's enough to make you weep, if I did that sort of thing, which I try not to. Reading Jane Austen is still allowed, however.

Amazon.com: What knowledge did you decide was important to add for American boys? I notice in both editions you have an excellent and useful section on table football, as played with coins. Is paper football strictly an American pastime? I'm not sure I could have gotten through the fourth grade without it.

Iggulden: I like knowing the details of battles, so Gettysburg and the Alamo had to go in, along with the Gettysburg address, stickball, state capitals, U.S. mountains, American trees, insects, U.S. historical timelines, and a lot of others. Navajo code talkers of WWII is a great chapter. It probably helps that I am a huge fan of America. It was only while rewriting for the U.S. that I realized how many positive references there already are. You have NASA and NASA trumps almost anything.

As for paper football, ever since I thought of putting the book together, people keep saying things like "You have rockets in there, yes? Everyone loves rockets!" Paper football is the first American one, but there will be many others. No book in the world is long enough to put them all in--unless we do a sequel, of course.

Amazon.com: Do you think The Dangerous Book for Boys is being read by actual boys, or only by nostalgic adults? Have you seen boys getting up from their Xboxes to go outside and perform first aid or tan animal skins or build go-carts?

Iggulden: I've had a lot of emails and letters from boys who loved the book--as well as fathers. I've had responses from kids as young as ten and an old man of 87, who pointed out a problem with the shadow stick that we've since changed. The thing to remember is that we may be older and more cynical every year, but boys simply aren't. If they are given the chance to make a go-cart with their dad, they jump at it. Mine did. Nothing gives me more pleasure than to know the book is being used with fathers and sons together, trying things out. Nothing is more valuable to a boy than time with his dad, learning something fun--or something difficult. That's part of the attitude too. If it's hard, you don't make it easy, you grab it by the throat and hang on for as long as it takes.

The book is often bought by fathers, of course. Their sons don't know Scott of the Antarctic is a great adventure story. How could they if it isn't taught any more? Good, heroic stories don't appear much in modern school curriculums--and then we wonder why boys don't seem interested.

Amazon.com: And finally, on to the important questions: Should Pluto still be a planet? And what was the best dinosaur?

Iggulden: Pluto is a planet. I know there are scientists who say it isn't, but it's big enough to be round and it has a moon, for crying out loud. Of course it's a planet. Give it ten years and they'll be agreeing with me again.

As for the best dinosaur, it depends what you mean by best. For sheer perfection, it probably has to be the shark and the crocodile. Modern ones are smaller but their record for sheer survival is pretty impressive. I only hope humanity can do as well. The only thing that will stop us is worrying too much.




Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 693
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1 out of 5 stars A rip-off   July 13, 2010
M. Ingram (Cheraw, SC United States)
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

This could be a great book if it lived up to the title, a great idea poorly done. Why not just buy the Boy Scout Handbook, it's much better and more useful. This is just a rehash of old reprints, largely from Boy Scouts. I guess I'm disappointed because the title promises so much and it delivers so little.


5 out of 5 stars "I didn't have this book when I was a boy"   July 11, 2010
Ben Nicholson (Landrake, Saltash, Cornwall, UK)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

"I didn't have this book when I was a boy" That quote from the book is very true. But that isn't a bad thing about this book, because this book either remind's off things you did as a child or tells you things you should have done or learnt. It's the perfect book of information and the only book you will ever need.
With this book you can find out so much information and do so much from it. You can either read for the information or re-live your childhood with the bits on knots, games and go-karts.You can even give it to your children (if you have any) for an easy to work things out, guide (think of my starting sentance when I say this). If not you can join in with your children and relive your childhood with them.
It's a great thing and as I quoted "I didn't have this book when I was a boy" Comment | Permalink



5 out of 5 stars For boys or girls   June 1, 2010
Sharon B. Danziger (AUSTIN, TX, US)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I gave this book to my Grandson for his kindergarten graduation. His older cousin
had received the book before and he was so very excited. There are so many activities to introduce to
children of the computer age who are already addicted to staying inside and playing computer games. He loves it.
It takes some assistance from grownups but that is great too.! Sharon Danziger



5 out of 5 stars Great Book for boys in Grade School   April 21, 2010
Denise Holt (Sacramento, CA)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

This is a wonderful book for boys in grade school. My son checked this book out from his school library three times in a row, so I knew it was something that was keeping his interest. Refreshing in a world where kids are spending so much time with electronics. I bought this new book for him and he was thrilled. We are working on building several of the items in this book. Great family involvement. I will purchase a couple more to have on hand for gifts for nephews/grandchildren.


5 out of 5 stars Perfect   April 13, 2010
R. A. Bingham (MOSCOW, ID, US)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

A friend of ours got this book and my husband has wanted it ever since. So I decided to get it for him for his birthday. He loved it and it was the perfect gift. Even though we do not have boys yet he enjoyed reading it and learning new things and thinking about how fun it will be when we do have boys or even when our little girl is a little older. I would recommend this book and this seller to anyone.

Showing reviews 1-5 of 693
1 2 3 4 5 6 ...139Next »


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