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Survive the Bomb: The Radioactive Citizen's Guide to Nuclear Survival

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Attention, citizens and fellow travelers of the Cold Survive the Bomb is your family’s ultimate fallout shelter companion. Keep this book at the ready next to the emergency drinking water and vacuum-packed canned meats and vegetables for that moment when the saber-rattling between the world’s superpowers turns Atomic.Here are all the tips and information you’ll need to keep your family safe and ·A convenient set of Civil Defense carrying cards for your wallet or purse·Steps for the home handyman toward building a well-furnished fallout shelter·How to convert your home’s snack bar into a cozy secondary shelter·A checklist of items you’ll need close at hand while awaiting the “all-clear” message from local authorities·An Operation Survival! comic, including a crossword puzzle and quiz for the kids·Revealing studies, reports, and recommendations to the United States Congress and President·Wargame scenarios, aftermath descriptions, and casualty estimates at various distances from a nuclear blast·An introduction and commentaries by Cold War historian Eric G. SwedinBe alert and be prepared. Don’t let a little thing like an atomic particle spoil your day.

192 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2011

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Eric G. Swedin

16 books6 followers

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Yaaresse.
2,158 reviews16 followers
April 13, 2018
Having just read The Atomic Times: My H-Bomb Year at the Pacific Proving Ground
I thought this would make an interesting follow-up since it deals with how the US Government was marketing the nuclear age to the general population.

The majority of the book is reprints of brochures, cards, and reports issued by the Civil Defense to Americans that take the bizarre tone of hyper-cheerful, can-do patriotism and paranoia. Imagine a "Leave it to Beaver" episode mashed up with the 1950s movie Battle Beneath the Earth. There's even a reprint of part of a comic book where a typical 50s dad and his kids are holed up in a bunker while he explains to them what radioactive fallout is. It alternates between calm, patronizing reassurances that there is nothing to worry about and "THE ENEMY IS GOING TO DESTROY US ALL!" Swedin gives a general history of the Cold War, nuclear testing, and what the government was doing (or claiming to do) in preparation for an attack. Swedin keeps the material general and non-geeky, or as much so as possible given the subject. In all, it's a pretty quick read.

While I grew up when "duck and cover," Civil Defense siren tests, and "the communist menace" were known to me, it was at the tail end of the Cold War when the paranoia had died down. It's not like I knew anyone with a fall-out shelter or anyone really paid any attention to the screaming air raid siren tests. (I recall asking an adult neighbor what we were supposed to do if the alarm really went off. His response was "Hell if I know, kid. Pray and kiss your butt goodbye, I guess.") It would be easy for me to laugh at what appears to be rampant paranoia. Would be. Could be. But all it takes is a look at the news or ads in most magazines -- or driving by the local survivalist store that features a $100k luxury bunker they want to sell you -- to convince me that little has changed in the cheerful paranoia department. Only the names and names of countries who are considered threats have changed. In 50 years, there will be a different version of this same book except for the 2000s.
Profile Image for Jim.
25 reviews
January 13, 2013
This is a HILARIOUS look at the justifiable paranoia surrounding the ATOMIC AGE in the the late 40's the 50's and the 60's.

DUCK AND COVER!

Many parts of this book are re-printed U.S. Government pamphlets that are strangely funny and very frightful at the same time. If you want to know how to build a bomb shelter..it's here.If you want to learn how to survive without a shelter it's here.

Actually..it was all for naught...it was a waste of time..nothing but a placebo for a worried public. IF there was nuclear war there is no doubt that I would not be writing this review!
Profile Image for Tara.
802 reviews18 followers
February 21, 2016
There was a decent amount of interesting information and a lot of documentation I've never seen before, but the huge need for editing and the abrupt connections made reading it a bit too much of a chore.
Profile Image for Michelle "Champ".
1,020 reviews22 followers
February 4, 2023
This book was not quite what I expected, but I did like it. It was full of information that was given to the public about nuclear fallout. Information like what to do, what to expect, how to pack your survival kit and how to build your safe space.
Profile Image for Big H.
408 reviews3 followers
September 5, 2012
Not what I expected, but still cool. Not a lot of new writing, but cool lots of cool reproductions of Cold War survival booklets and wallet cards.
Profile Image for Ariel.
1,338 reviews64 followers
October 25, 2014
What a fun way to present this information! It was both informative and fun to read. I feel prepared for the Cold War.
Profile Image for Amanda.
209 reviews8 followers
February 4, 2016
Interesting, but the eBook version had a ton of distracting typos.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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