Welcome! Handprint Press publishes a short list of books for learning by doing. Kiko Denzer (that's me) serves as publisher, manager, and primary author -- other authors include my mother, Ann Sayre Wiseman, and friends Max and Eva Edleson. You can buy all the books at the bookstore, including mom's classic Making Things, her last book, Satisfy the Image (techniques for working with dreams and dreamers), and Max and Eva's Build Your Own Barrel Oven. I also sell Ianto Evans and Lesley Jackson's book on Rocket Mass Heaters. My other work includes oven-building, greenwoodworking, teaching, . . .
Sproutlands, Wm. Bryant Logan
One of my favorite books is Dirt, The Ecstatic Skin of the Earth, by William Bryant Logan, which I read years ago, when I was up to my eyeballs in mud, making ovens and houses and doing all kinds of mud work in schools and communities. Then I slowly found myself more and more absorbed in wood, and discovered a new title, Oak: Frame of Civilization. By that time, apparently, Logan had gone from working as Writer-in-Residence at the Church of St. John the Divine in NYC, to working as an arborist. This new book begins when the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC asks him to pollard some Plane trees . . .
Wood, food, Bacteria & Nana-tech
People often express concerns that eating off of wood is "unhygienic," and perhaps even dangerous. I will restrain myself from ranting about how industrialized, commercialized, and commodified culture has turned nature into an evil villain bent on poisoning humanity. Instead, I'll refer you to the work of Dean O. Cliver, a UC Davis prof who compared bacterial survival on wooden cutting boards to bacterial survival on plastic. Guess what? Wood won. Here's a pdf of the article (nana-tech follows): If you look around the web, you'll find other articles extolling the virtues of various . . .