A query from a friend prompts me to explain my four-star rating here. It was about 10 years ago that I read the book and I remember at the time that I liked it very much; I probably would have given it five stars then. But a long time has passed and I do not want to trust my judgement from that time. At the time Harry Browne (the author) was the Libertarian Party presidential candidate, and I was rather a fan of him. I recommended him to many people as a man of integrity. Later on I had reason to doubt this, when I read some investigative reporting in Liberty Magazine, by the editor, Bill Winter, about the spending practices of the campaign, and some other practices which were seemingly in violation of the Libertarian Party bylaws. (The particular bylaws were intended to prevent conflicts of interest between presidential campaigns and Libertarian Party staff.) I was pretty upset by all this, as I had, in my opinion, put my own reputation on the line when I recommended him to other people as a man of integrity. I'm sure he had his reasons for what he did, and that they seemed honorable to him at the time, but I feel reasonably comfortable saying that being under the pressure of being a presidential candidate probably clouded his better judgement at the time.
I soon lost interest in the Libertarian Party, and a year or so after that, I lost interest in Liberty Magazine. The mag had been getting more and more annoying to me, but the turning point was one article I read that was basically telling "closet anarchists in the party" to get lost. Get lost I did. Bill Winter is very cool, and many others there, but WAY too often those Libertarians are just Republicans dolled up like they care about more than their balance of accounts.
So given all this, and the fact that it was 10 years ago or so when I read the book, I can't claim to be able to make an impartial review on the How I Found Freedom in an Unfree World. What I remember about it was, it was very simple and straightforward, and contained a lot of useful advice. Tthe author never had a problem with drug addictions of whatever kind and didn't have any useful advice about that, which in my mind, rather limits the usefulness of the book to many of us looking for that elusive Freedom thing.