In the 1970s, Dolly Freed lived off the land dirt cheap and plum easy.
Living in their own house on a half-acre lot outside of Philadelphia for
almost five years, Dolly and her father produced their own food and
drink and spent roughly $700 each per year. Thirty years later, Dolly
Freed's Possum Living is as fascinating and pertinent as it was in
1978. Tin House is reissuing the survivalist classic with a foreword by
David Gates and an afterword by the author.
After discussing reasons why you should or shouldn't give up your job,
Possum Living gives you details about the cheapest ways with the best
results to buy and maintain your home, dress well, cope with the law,
stay healthy, and keep up a middle-class facade whether you live in the
city, in the suburbs, or in a small town.
In a delightful, straightforward style, Dolly Freed explains how to be
lazy, proud, miserly, and honest, live well and enjoy leisure. She
shares her knowledge for what you do need - your own home, for example -
and what you don't need, such as doctors, lawyers, and insurance.
Through her own example, Dolly hopes to inspire you to do some
independent thinking about how economics affect the course of your life
now and may do so in the coming "age of shortages." If you ever wondered
what it would be like to be in greater control of your own life, Possum
Living will show you and help you do it for yourself.