Published in 1942 and aimed at the Home Guard, this booklet - generously
illustrated with photographs of the unarmed combat tactics it describes - seeks
to impart simple but effective techniques for dealing with both an armed and
un-armed attacker. The techniques it describes range from escaping a
stranglehold; coping with an enemy who digs a pistol into your back; and a guide
to vulnerable parts of the body. Its advice ranges from the straightforward: ‘If
you are handy with your fists nothing can beat a good, solid punch on the jaw’,
to the deadly: ‘A well-delivered rabbit punch just under the ears will at least
dislocate the neck, and very probably break it’. This is a timeless and still
extremely useful guide for defending oneself without weapons in dangerous
times.
Reprint of the 1942 original edition.