
George Nash (1)
Author of Renovating Old Houses: Bringing New Life to Vintage Homes (For Pros By Pros)
For other authors named George Nash, see the disambiguation page.
About the Author
George Nash has worked as a renovation contractor for over 20 years. Between house renovation projects, he has taught home design and construction courses, authored several books, contributed articles to Fine Homebuilding magazine, and operated a Christmas tree business in New York City
Works by George Nash
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Homesteading in the 21st Century: How One Family Created a More Sustainable, Self-Sufficient, and Satisfying Life by George Nash
This book covers the big three of homesteading: shelter, gardening, and animals. George has also written a whole book devoted to renovating old houses and in the chapter-long summary of housing he covers some points that I hadn't seen in other homesteading books – like the service drop (the terrifying and confusing tangle of wires and connectors that run from the utility pole in the street to your house). In the gardening section was this revelation: “Each degree of increase in a show more south-facing slope is equivalent to a southward shift of 70 miles – which means the ground will warm faster in spring. Laying out your garden in a 10º slope is the same as moving it 700 miles southward.” [pg 44] The writing is a delightful mix of purple words (Littoral? New one on me.) and homey colloquialisms. Humorous & colorful but still good, practical advice.
“Reducing superfluous consumption and paring down your list of wants to your list of needs doesn't mean that you have to live a life of privation. It just requires you to find more in less. The goal of homesteading is to live deep, not wide.” [pg 10]
They truly have a balanced outlook on what they're doing. For example, in their list of recommended reading they suggest not only Living the Good Life by the Nearings, but Meanwhile, Next Door to the Good Life, by Jean Hay Bright, the book that “debunked” the Nearings. show less
“Reducing superfluous consumption and paring down your list of wants to your list of needs doesn't mean that you have to live a life of privation. It just requires you to find more in less. The goal of homesteading is to live deep, not wide.” [pg 10]
They truly have a balanced outlook on what they're doing. For example, in their list of recommended reading they suggest not only Living the Good Life by the Nearings, but Meanwhile, Next Door to the Good Life, by Jean Hay Bright, the book that “debunked” the Nearings. show less
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- Works
- 5
- Members
- 484
- Popularity
- #51,010
- Rating
- 4.1
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 33










