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6 Reviews
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Wonderfully simple book for herbal and home remedies,
By A Customer
This review is from: Herbal Medicine: Revised & Updated (Hardcover)
If you don't know anything about herbs, and or using them in everyday situations, you have to buy this book. I have not purchased the revised edition but I do have the original, and its wonderful. If you are a begginer its a great book to have just for the recipes and formulas.
The recipes are very simple, and have common ingredients you can find around the house in your spice and herb cabinet and or can get at a local grocery store or in your back yard.
If you are a begginer buy this book, its fun, its informative and you can make things without searching high and low for the ingredients.
If you are an intermediate to advance herb user its still worth purchasing, for the same reasons that the begginer would use it for.
Its just a great general for in home herb book.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Fun, light, informative!,
By
This review is from: Dian Dincin Buchman's Herbal medicine: The natural way to get well and stay well ; illustrated by Lauren Jarrett (Hardcover)
There’s something enjoyable about this book. I don’t mean just in content, or diagrams, or even in purpose – but in its readability. It’s fun to just sit down and real, all simple and cut down to the basics. Buchman makes sure to inject some folklore and her personal experiences, but beyond that it’s the classic guide for beginners.
She does heed caution with many remedies and suggests frequent doctor visits, double checking everything, and using herbs primarily for slight conditions, yet she seems like a determined and experienced herbalist. Much of her knowledge was obviously derived from her grandmother, a woman it's clear she was close to and learned much from. Even I felt special seeing some of the older woman's recipes after the love and admiration Buchman showed her. The book is broken into four sections: Section One: My Favorite Herbs: Here she lists her favorite herbs, including Comfrey Root. This controversial herb is also a favorite of mine and many other herbalists; I'm delighted to see she shares my enthusiasm. She does warn about the use of comfrey internally because of studies, but then has remedies where they're used that way. Many of the herbs listed are easy to obtain and common, such as Cayenne, Cinnamon, and Cloves. She includes foods as a great way of healing, listing Honey as an aide. Lemon is a marvelous food, and she celebrates it within these pages with glee. It's easy to read the list, and all the herbs truly are good. I greatly enjoyed her experience with them. On the negative side of things, she does this from a very basic point of view. It's extremely rare to find even one phytochemical listed on these herbs, she doesn't cite any studies, and not much detail. She doesn't list the actions of the herbs in a clear list like many herbals do; in short, it's extremely basic and is recommended more for a bare beginner. However, that's just for learning...for reading even a more advanced herbalist will delight in absorbing her words. Second Section - A herbal Selector Here she lists the obligatory diseases and disorders with their herbal therapies. It's not long and detailed but it gets to the point and is informative. She relates personal experience both she and her family had with these herbs, again refraining from phytochemicals, why most of the things work, etc. This section has many remedies and formulae blended in with the text, making it an ever bigger treat. Very, very little is discussed on conditions themselves, such as causes, symptoms, etc. Section Three - How to make herbal medicine A genuine treat! Very few herbals concentrate enough on explaining creating your own concoctions in detail. While not every single thing is brought up, and her section on things such as tinctures are surprisingly brief, she does offer much time and paper space showing how to create your own products. She keeps it simple and makes everything appear quite easy - which of course it is. The instructions are almost always accompanied by sample recipes, which helps a lot. This is the shining star of the book. The final section is a reference on where to find more resources and information. Overall, a book aimed toward the basic beginner, but one enjoyable for all. If you know much about herbs and their usage, you probably won't be enlightened too heavily by this, yet you will learn about personal experience she's had, discover a new thing or two, and share in a delightful, enthusiastic read. It's a great book to have lining the shelf, with some genuinely nifty formulas such as the original Vinegar of the four thieves, some neat candy, mouthwashes, and more. Also, you can't beat an herbalist that uses comfrey and honey so genuinely. But if you’re very new and need convincing (such as facts, reasons, etc), this isn’t the place to start. Recommended!
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Beginners and Advanced Herbalist "Must Have" book!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Herbal Medicine: Revised & Updated (Hardcover)
This was one of the first herb books I purchased some 20 years ago; and by far one of the most used. The book gives excellent information on herbal care, easy to read and well documented. Sections on tincture and salve making are very well written, again easy to understand, and drawing explicit with instructions easy to understand. I have used this book in teaching herbal health classes; and excellent choice.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Easy-to-use intro to Gramma's home medicines,
By Talya "tells it like it is" (Anatot-Almon Israel) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Herbal Medicine: Revised & Updated (Hardcover)
This book is organized in two ways - by plant and by symptom.
By plant you can see the different uses for each herb, and by symptom you look up your health issue and you can then decide which treament best suits you (maybe depending on what you've got on hand..). It also has a handy explanation of the various ways plants are treated to make the best use of them. This book is on my shelf, always at hand. Many times I've used cough and stomach rememdies from it, and many times I felt better just knowing I was treating my kids with natural sources and putting alittle limit on the chemicals.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The bible for home remedies,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Dian Dincin Buchman's Herbal medicine: The natural way to get well and stay well ; illustrated by Lauren Jarrett (Hardcover)
I have many many home remedy books. None come close to this one for accuracy and ease of preparation. The book does assume that you have the wherewith-all to do canning, preparations, and the common sense to not over do it.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
great book especially for beginners,
By GiveGodPraise "Amy" (Vermont) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Herbal Medicine: Revised & Updated (Hardcover)
I love this book. Very helpful. It was my first herbal book and I love it because it offers not only descriptions of how to use various herbs, but recipes for everything from teas to homemade healing salves. Anyway, I really enjoy this book and highly recommend it.
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Herbal Medicine: Revised & Updated by Dian Dincin Buchman (Hardcover - March 5, 1996)
Used & New from: $0.01
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