When Deborah Niemann and her husband have been homesteading for 15 years now and over time they have expanded and added to their homestead. I hadn't seen the original edition, but this one is the updated 2nd edition. I really liked her introduction about why they changed their lifestyle to one of homesteading and the benefits from that change. I also know that any book Joel Salatin writes the forward to will be worth reading! I really liked how she organized the book by topic - gardening, orchard, poultry, homegrown business, etc. that way you could read the sections that interested you the most. But some of the other sections were helpful - I'm not planning to raise pigs, but the chapter on cooking with pork and lard was still something I wanted to read. Overall, it is a good introduction to the various aspects of homesteading. It's not meant to be a comprehensive guide - the chapter on honey is only a few pages long and that is not enough to make you a beekeeper, but it can explain the basics so you can then delve further into that aspect if it interests you with other books, classes, etc. Overall, a very helpful book if you want to do more for yourself.
A quote I really liked:
"It first became obvious to researchers in the 1970s that farmers had a much higher rate of some cancers, although they are otherwise healthier than the general population. Since then, studies from many countries have found that farmers have increased rates of leukemia, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, multiple myeloma, soft tissue sarcoma, and cancers of the skin, lip, prostate, brain, and stomach. After eliminating possible causes - such as increased sun exposure causing an increased risk of skin cancer - insecticides were declared the culprit for the increased risks of leukemia, multiple myeloma, and brain cancer. Herbicides have been linked to non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and soft tissue sarcoma...A 2004 study showed that children of farmers who apply pesticides have higher rates of several cancers. That study included 17,357 children born to Iowan farmers after 1975 and compared them to the cancer rates for the general population of Iowa during the same time. Researchers found that there were twice as many cases of childhood lymphoma and two and a half times as many cases of Hodgkin's and Burkitt's lymphomas. They also had more than twice as many bone tumors and germ cell tumors. The researchers also found increased rates of brain tumors, neuroblastoma, retinoblasomas, Wilms' tumors, and soft tissue tumors. Even more telling is the fact that the cancer rates were three times as high for children whose parent did not wear chemically resistant gloves during mixing and application." (p. 10)