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Safe In The City: A Streetwise Guide To Avoid Being Robbed, Raped, Ripped Off, Or Run Over

Safe In The City: A Streetwise Guide To Avoid Being Robbed, Raped, Ripped Off, Or Run Over

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Author: Chris Pfouts
Publisher: Paladin Press
Category: Book

List Price: $25.95
Buy Used: $3.25
You Save: $22.70 (87%)



New (17) Used (15) from $3.25

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 6 reviews
Sales Rank: 79169

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 320
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 8.5 x 5.5 x 0.8

ISBN: 0873647750
Dewey Decimal Number: 362.88
EAN: 9780873647755
ASIN: 0873647750

Publication Date: May 1994
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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  • A Professional's Guide to Ending Violence Quickly: How Bouncers, Bodyguards, and Other Security Professionals Handle Ugly Situations
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  • Pool Cues, Beer Bottles, And Baseball Bats: Animal's Guide To Improvised Weapons For Self-Defense
  • Violence, Blunders, And Fractured Jaws: Advanced Awareness Techniques And Street Etiquette

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
This is an entertaining street-level look at how crimes are really committed in America's cities. Chris and Animal use their NY-L.A. experience to help you learn the games carjackers, muggers, "gangstas," rapists, junkies and conmen play-and how to avoid them.


Customer Reviews:   Read 1 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars The straight goods on protecting yourself in the city   May 12, 2008
I have read dozens of self-defense books and this is a good one. The authors do not describe martial art moves or fighting. Rather, they describe the 5 stages of an assault: The intent, the interview, positioning, the attack and the reaction. After putting violent crime into that perspective, I began to see the mistakes that led up to my own problems with being assaulted as a teen.

Authors Marc MacYoung and Chris Pfouts describe common scenarios that people do not learn until it is too late: the squeegee guy who will snatch your watch when you try to pay them, the teen who will slap a guy's date to draw the guy into a fight with a pack of teens, how a car jacker approaches a car, how to drive away without getting shot. They also talk about the early danger signs of a trouble maker. Like the guy who broods, talks violence and has an addictive personality.

I think that several books could be written from some of the information in this book. For instance, women who are most likely to be raped are between 18 and 25, like to party and are already contemptuous of men. The book also gives good advice for young women at a party such as bringing a friend or sleeping in their car. (Otherwise, they might wake up to find someone like their friend's boyfriend on top of them). Much of this book's advice is from actual interviews with criminals and crime victims. Some of the book's comments might rattle some people, but it does not have to be politically correct to keep the reader out of trouble.



3 out of 5 stars The scary streets   June 12, 2006
 2 out of 10 found this review helpful

Fairly good advice given using LA and NY city as models. I can only speak for LA but alot of things he says about it now seem dated. If you've never been to either of those cities, he will make you afraid to go, but as a life long (50 years) resident of LA whose never had a problem, I have to take what he says about LA and NY too with a grain of salt. Then again, perhaps I've just been lucky. Come to think of it I did have a battery stolen out of my car at Venice Beach in 1985 not to mention the time I was robbed, raped, beaten, assaulted with a deadly weapon, and had a nuclear device go off under my car. But that was in Compton. Being a white guy I should have known better not to go there but I had heard about this dude with some really good crack and... LOL


1 out of 5 stars Intense talking with no straight answers.   August 17, 2000
 6 out of 34 found this review helpful

Imagine a pack of wolves circling a... fox. The moment the pack strikes (topic reaches the answer) lord redfur has beamed to (choose) astral plane, ufo, vixen's burrow. The book reads as if someone copied loose files from Animal and Pfouts, it holds no truth which is not known from "crime prevention" tv or local police. Sadly, I hoped I would be wrong with Animal, but his works declined after Violence, Blunder & Cheap Shots. The one crime I found is that trees are killed to give useless dabbling a bookform. Please begin electronic texts.


5 out of 5 stars True Crime from Guys Who Know!   May 4, 2000
 15 out of 18 found this review helpful

As a professional security specialist, I can say without hesitation that this book is one of the best written on the subject of street crime. MacYoung and Pfouts know their subject intimately well, and their research into criminal psychology is more thorough than a semester of Criminal Justice in college! I tested the veracity of this book while working as a private investigator; my bosses were retired police detectives, and they were firmly impressed with the knowledge these "civilians" possessed. If you want to safeguard yourself on the mean (and not-so-mean) streets, I highly recommend buying this book and putting its recommendations to use. By the way, I live an hour outside of New York City, and I have seen and identify with much of co-author Pfouts' experiences in the Big Apple. This book is not to be missed.


5 out of 5 stars He'sTaken Many Beatings for This Knowlege, Be Smart Read It   February 27, 2000
 2 out of 8 found this review helpful

If you have never read a book or seen a video from Marc "Animal" MacYoung, you are in for a very different experience. MacYoung relies on many of his own street experiences to pass along information and techniques. This results in some wild tales and the liberal use of "street" language throughout the book. (Sometimes I wonder if Paladin puts their authors up to this). You'd probably not want your mother to read this, but for the reader who needs to get streetwise fast, take advantage of MacYoung's experience and skip the beatings of your own.

Brad Parker, Defend University

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