My biggest problem with "books" is there are really very few astounding volumes on the actual shooting technique and mechanics. A few like Brian Enos' books really stand out, but it does so largely because there is no serious competition.seamusTX wrote:Shooting is hardly as complicated as playing the violin or tennis. You can see that you either hit the point of aim or you didn't, and the causes and solutions to various problems are well-documented.
The Army manual is written so that a relatively raw recruit can learn from it. The cost is effectively zero (though I printed a copy and had it bound).
I think a few formal lessons and consistent practice will keep most shooters at a practical level.
It's a small investment for a skill that can save your life and the lives of your loved ones.
- Jim
And I was REALLY hoping that someone would suggest some newer (or other) books that I don't know about, that are really good on mechanics: improving accuracy and speed. For now, it is just PRACTICE, PRACTICE, PRACTICE.
As you say, the Army manual is free (or a few bucks if you print it off) and it has an accurate and understable description of what to *do*. And perhaps it is that shooting (firing the round) is a relatively simple activity, easy to learn, but always offering room for improvement in either speed or accuracy, that that makes the super book unlikely.
This used to be the case with martial arts books, there were few at all, and almost no great ones.
I usually don't recommend "video training" for most things, but martial arts and shooting are coming out with some really good titles.
I didn't think that D.R. Middlebrook's Fist-Fire was a good place to start a beginner (but I could easily be wrong about that) or I would have affered his book and his video -- neither alone was quite perfect but together they were worth far more than the cost. Highly recommended.
And I WOULD like to take a course with D.R. sometime its jut so awkward to get to eastern Virginia and find the time and money at the same time. http://www.tacticalshooting.com/faq.html They have a forum (like this one) but it doesn't have as much general information and "friends" conversing as here. It's more focused on just their "products" (training, books, video, method) and they lost the archive due to a hack attack so it doesn't go back very far.