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Alcohol Can Be A Gas!: Fueling an Ethanol Revolution for the 21st Century Paperback – November 1, 2007

4.6 out of 5 stars 198 ratings

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The most complete manual on alcohol fuel production and use ever written. Not just a very detailed how-to manual but a thorough treatment of all the issues raging in the public debate over ethanol. Historical, political, ecological, agricultural, and ecological implications of replacing petroleum with farm produced alcohol fuel. The technical sections have been drawn from hands on grassroots expeience by the author and others in production of fuel from a wide variety of crops and waste products, conversion of literally every sort of engine in existence to utilize ethanol instead of gas or diesel. Also covers cogeneration of electricity and heat with alcohol as well as cooking, cooling and lighting with alternative fuel. Shows the economics of small scale alcohol production and instructs the reader how to legally produce their own moonshine while harvesting tax credit usually given to petroleum companies that mix alcohol with their fuel.The book contains 473 endnotes, a 6000 entry index, and extensive glossary. FROM THE BACK COVER This book is a complete toolkit for farmers, contractors, alternative energy users, mechanics, people concerned with climate change or Peak Oil and anone who thinks they are paying to much for fuel.How to make alcohol for about 47 cents per gallon How to organize a profitable, driver-controlled neighborhood alcohol fuel station Ways to convert your gas engine to 100% alcohol for as little as $50 How to beat oil companies by operating your own small alcohol fuel company.How to get the 61 cents per gallon federal ethanol tax credit refunded to you as cash.How to correctly fill out the permit that legally allows you to make 200 proof moonshine fuel.Would you be surprised to know: Detroit has made flexible fueled alcohol cars for sale in the US since 1994 You can fill up on alcohol at more than 1200 stations in the US.Your gasoline car can already use at least 50% ethanol without modification.Brazil runs 50% of its cars on straight ethanol.Ethanol is liquid solar energy and we can reverse global warming by switching to alcohol fuel.Alcohol is 105 octane, as good as the best racing or aviation fuels.Alcohol Can Be A Gas! gives every reader the power to take back control of energy from oil companies. This book is packed with actual experiences, proven data, practical designs, and great stories. It also provides the nitty gritty details neede to fuel a revolution of small businesses prepared to exploit the market opportunities around ecological auto fuel production.
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Editorial Reviews

Review

David Blume's Alcohol Can Be a Gas1 is the most comprehensive and understandable book on renewable fuels ever compiled. Over a quarter century in the making, the book explains the history, technology, and even the sociology of renewable fuels in a fashion that can be appreciated by the most accomplished in the ethanol and biodiesel fields, as well as the novice and young students of the issues.

Blume summarizes the history of ethanol from the Whiskey Rebellion to the 2007 Energy Bill now pending before the U.S. Congress. His history also includes the century-old struggle between ethanol advocates, such as Henry Ford (who preferred ethanol to petroleum and produced the first Flex-Fuel Vehicle) and his arch nemesis, John D. Rockefeller of Standard Oil (who actually funded the temperance movement to enact Prohibition in order to eliminate his competition for motor fuel). He also exposes the great myths about ethanol, telling who conceived them and why they did.

Blume's step-by-step instructions can help anyone build an ethanol plant (from a few hundred gallons to a hundred million gallons per year) or convert your car into an alternative fuel vehicle. Blume explains that ethanol does not need to be a corn-only, Midwestern industry and that there are hundreds of crops in every state of the Union from which we can make renewable fuels.

The book has hundreds of illustrations, charts, and diagrams to make his points, including some of the most humorous, entertaining and provocative cartoons likely to be found anywhere. The extensive two-dozen page glossary provides an excellent reference on all energy-related subjects.

I have personally worked in the renewable energy sector in one form or another for close to four decades, and I can recommend Alcohol Can Be a Gas! as the best book I have ever read on the subject. You will laugh out loud at his sharp wit and the dozens of cartoons. But when you finish reading Dave's book, you will have a much better understanding of how our nation's energy policy evolved, why it is what it is today, and what needs to be done for the future.

The petroleum age is only about one hundred years old, a tiny blip on the history of mankind, and, according to many experts, it is over half over. It is time to review the [alternative] energy systems of the past, biomass, ethanol, wind, solar, if we are to understand our future energy independence. David Blume's Alcohol Can Be a Gas is a must-read to prepare anyone for this critical endeavor. --Larry Mitchell, CEO, American Corn Growers Association

Everything you wanted to know about alcohol-fuel production but were afraid to ask. More than 20 years ago, veteran biofuel guru Blume (
Alcohol Can Be a Gas!, 1983) beat the drum for alcohol-based alternative fuels. Blume's latest book is a well researched and expanded update to his original work, incorporating 21st-century concerns over global warming, domestic-energy policy, grassroots biofuel solutions, and the challenges of going green in a world dominated by the fossil fuel "oiligarchy."

Blume systematically and entertainingly builds his case for individual responsibility and activism in dealing with the nation's domestic-energy challenges, and he excludes no one in preaching his gospel of alcohol-fuel independence. For the novice, Blume tells the story of alcohol production's rich history in America, from the Civil War to today, and effectively demystifies the thorny pros and cons of the current national energy-policy debate regarding ethanol. This education alone is worth the cover price.

Make no mistake, the book is more than a bully pulpit for championing sociopolitical opinions on global-energy woes; it is a technical how-to book. Written with enterprising do-it-yourselfers in mind, Blume offers countless hands-on technical soluti --Ernest Callenbach, Author of Ecotopia

David Blume's
Alcohol Can Be a Gas1 is the most comprehensive and understandable book on renewable fuels ever compiled. Over a quarter century in the making, the book explains the history, technology, and even the sociology of renewable fuels in a fashion that can be appreciated by the most accomplished in the ethanol and biodiesel fields, as well as the novice and young students of the issues.

Blume summarizes the history of ethanol from the Whiskey Rebellion to the 2007 Energy Bill now pending before the U.S. Congress. His history also includes the century-old struggle between ethanol advocates, such as Henry Ford (who preferred ethanol to petroleum and produced the first Flex-Fuel Vehicle) and his arch nemesis, John D. Rockefeller of Standard Oil (who actually funded the temperance movement to enact Prohibition in order to eliminate his competition for motor fuel). He also exposes the great myths about ethanol, telling who conceived them and why they did.

Blume's step-by-step instructions can help anyone build an ethanol plant (from a few hundred gallons to a hundred million gallons per year) or convert your car into an alternative fuel vehicle. Blume explains that ethanol does not need to be a corn-only, Midwestern industry and that there are hundreds of crops in every state of the Union from which we can make renewable fuels.

The book has hundreds of illustrations, charts, and diagrams to make his points, including some of the most humorous, entertaining and provocative cartoons likely to be found anywhere. The extensive two-dozen page glossary provides an excellent reference on all energy-related subjects.

I have personally worked in the renewable energy sector in one form or another for close to four decades, and I can recommend Alcohol Can Be a Gas! as the best book I have ever read on the subject. You will laugh out loud at his sharp wit and the dozens of cartoons. But when you finish reading Dave's book, you will have a much better understanding of how our nation's energy policy evolved, why it is what it is today, and what needs to be done for the future.

The petroleum age is only about one hundred years old, a tiny blip on the history of mankind, and, according to many experts, it is over half over. It is time to review the [alternative] energy systems of the past, biomass, ethanol, wind, solar, if we are to understand our future energy independence. David Blume's Alcohol Can Be a Gas is a must-read to prepare anyone for this critical endeavor. --Larry Mitchell, CEO, American Corn Growers Association

The overarching importance of this delightful book is that it demonstrates how beside the point is the current pseudo-debate about the net energy from corn ethanol. As Blume demonstrates, fuel alcohol must be an important component of our solar-based future. It can be made from a huge variety of feedstocks, including sugar beets and cane, nuts, mesquite, Jerusalem artichokes, algae, even coffee-bean pulp; there is no real scarcity of land to grow fuel. There is a scarcity of independent, original thinking, and Blume's book provides plenty of it, along with ample doses of amazing, startling, and sometimes scary information, ecological, technological, and political-economic.

This is a vast, detailed compendium drawn from decades of experience by an alert, smart, and skeptical hands-on thinker. Blume has given us his biofuels bible, and we can learn from him and survive quite nicely, or follow what he calls MegaOilron into oblivion. --Ernest Callenbach, Author of Ecotopia

From the Inside Flap

This is a paperback so there's no flap but why waste a box. Here's some praise from others for the book.Praise for Alcohol Can Be A Gas! ¬"Brilliant! This book should be on the reading list of every American!! Thom Hartmann, New York Times best-selling author, and nationally syndicated host of The Thom Hartmann Program on Air America. Humanity has used up roughly half of the worlds oil and topsoil. Just in time, David Blume has given us Alcohol Can Be A Gas! Its a practical road map for supplying all of our energy needs without drilling, strip-mining, and/or depleting the soil. In fact, following Blumes model, soil fertility would actually increase worldwide; energy production would be not only sustainable, but democraticand highly profitable on the small scale. This is a brilliant visionary work. And, with Mr. Blumes witty personality, reading it is certainly a gas. Larry Korn, Soil Scientist, Translator, and Editor of The One-Straw Revolution: An Introduction to Natural Farming."Dave Blume has written the definitive opus on alcohol as a fuel. From the 30,000-foot view to the most minute technical detail, Alcohol Can be a Gas! makes a strong case for the practical, ecological, political, and economic sense in converting to ethanol. It's heartening to see the world's original alcohol pioneer stay abreast of the times with a book that has the promise to knock some sense into our insidious fossil-fueled economy. This book is much needed in this era of Peak Oil and fast-accelerating climate change." John Schaeffer, President and Founder of Real Goods, and Executive Director of the Institute for Solar Living.As intersections of the food-energy-climate matrix form in Iowa cornfields, Amazonian rain forests and Canadian gene splicing labs, and end-game battles for their control pit theocratic flat-worlders against biologists, climatologists, and tree-huggers over the very survival of life on Earth, David Blume emerges like a wizard on a misty pinnacle, back-lit by the full moon, revealing a gemstone in his extended palm.Albert Bates, author, The Post Petroleum Survival Guide and Cookbook: Recipes for Changing Times (New Society, 2006) The over-arching importance of this delightful book is that it demonstrates how beside the point is the current pseudo-debate about the net energy from corn ethanol. As Blume demonstrates, fuel alcohol must be an important component of our solar-based future. It can be made from a huge variety of feedstocks, including sugar beets and cane, nuts, mesquite, Jerusalem artichokes, algae, even coffee-bean pulp; there is no real scarcity of land to grow fuel. There is a scarcity of independent, original thinking--and Blumes book provides plenty of it, along with ample doses of amazing, startling, and sometimes scary information--ecological, technological, and political-economic. This is a vast, detailed compendium drawn from decades of experience by an alert, smart, and skeptical hands-on thinker. Blume has given us his biofuels bible, and we can learn from him and survive quite nicely, or follow what he calls MegaOilron into oblivion.Ernest Callenbach, author of Ecotopia, Ecotopia Emerging, and Ecology:A Pocket Guide What a tour-de-force! This is the most comprehensive and authoritative guide through all the controversy about ethanol as transportation fuel, showing it as a clear winner in the quest for solutions to our environmental and geopolitical problems. Engagingly written, full of important and amazing information and resources, this book meets every challenge to the vision for a clean, democratic path to a prosperous future for all.-Joe Jordan, Atmospheric Researcher, NASA/Ames Research Center Finally an alcohol book for the layman and backyard enthusiast. In our culture's collective industrialized love affair with mega everything, Blume cuts across the government-subsidized factories with ecologically practical models. Here is a viable energy system that can be embedded in a region linking rural producers to urban users of energy and food. Self-reliance and resiliency follow community-based alcohol production, and we all owe a debt of gratitude to Blume for codifying his life's passion in what is a veritable compendium of information. Joel Salatin Farmer and author of bothYou Can Farm and Everything I Want to Do Is Illegal.Ethanol champion David Blume has completed his opus, Alcohol Can Be a Gas! It is a great read. The history of petroleum, history of alcohol, technical coverage of production process, vehicle development (conversion) and feedstocks. It's all in the text complete with charts and pictures.David's wit, wisdom and hardcore experience illuminate this biofuels potential. We have eagerly awaited this publication and will use it in Sustainable Transportation and Biofuels courses.Dr. Jack Martin, Appropriate Technology Program, Appalachian State University, Vice-Chair of Renewable Fuels and Transportation Division, American Solar Energy Society|Dear Reader, Thanks so much for purchasing this special limited first edition printing of Alcohol Can Be A Gas! For many of you, I want to especially thank you for your patience. I have been working full-time on this project for four years, and thats two years longer than I thought it would take. For those of you who have hung in there with me, and kept cheering me on when the going was tough, I have to say I couldnt have done it without your support. When I first started on this project 25 years agofilmed my series for KQED and wrote the original bookI thought it had the potential to make a substantial difference to the economics and environmental quality of the United States.But today I have set a much higher bar for the goals for this book. I believe that the human races ability to survivein the face of the interconnected problems of Peak Oil, climate change thats heading for the tipping point, and unchecked population growthis in question. Without a radical change in how we power our societies and conduct our agriculture, the civilization we currently take for granted will dissolve due to wars for resources, while a large part of humanity will be forced to migrate to higher ground. It is my expectation that this new book will be a tool for the revolutionary change needed to address the challenges facing the entire planet, not just the U.S. So someday, when there are alcohol biorefineries producing fuel, food, and all sorts of products in every bioregion, when greenhouse gases are on the decline and ice packs are deepening on the poles, when air pollution is a thing of the past, all of our sewage is processed in cattail marshes, kelp farms send spent mash through derelict oil pipelines to Midwest farms, agriculture becomes otherwise regionalized and organic, you will be able to pat yourself on the back and know you helped make it happen.Share. Organize. Win.Dave Blume 6/11/07

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ 0979043778
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Intl Inst for Ecological Agric; 1st edition (November 1, 2007)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 596 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 9780979043772
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0979043772
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 4 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 8.25 x 1.5 x 10.75 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.6 out of 5 stars 198 ratings

About the author

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David Blume
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David Blume is an inventor, researcher, organic farmer, alcohol expert, author, teacher and doer with decades of experience at the cutting edge of permaculture, regenerative agricultural technology, and especially alcohol fuel as it fits into local-scale ecological no-waste solutions that, replicated, solve so many of the Earth's seemingly unsolvable problems.

Your support allows Dave to articulate, teach, present, and promote important information and big solutions. Often, the information and technologies he tells you about have been undermined and sabotaged by big oil and other corporate entities intent on squeezing money out of people—scared that people will wake up and realize they don't need fossil fuels. We can have a carbohydrate economy instead of a petroleum economy. We can literally put power in the hands of the people.

Dave started his ecological training young. He and his father Jerry grew almost all the food their family ate, organically—on a city lot in San Francisco in the mid-’60s!

Dave taught his first ecology class in 1970. After majoring in Ecological Biology and Biosystematics at San Francisco State University, he worked on experimental projects, first for NASA, and then as a member of the Mother Earth News Eco Village alternative building and alternative energy teams.

When the energy crisis of 1978–79 struck, Dave started the American Homegrown Fuel Co., an educational organization that taught upwards of 7000 people how to produce and use low-cost alcohol fuel at home or on the farm.

KQED, San Francisco’s Public Broadcasting System station, asked Dave to put his alcohol workshop on television, and together they spent two years making the ten-part series, Alcohol as Fuel. To accompany the series, Dave wrote the comprehensive manual on the subject, the original Alcohol Can Be A Gas! Shortly after the first show aired, in 1983, oil companies threatened to pull out their funding if the series was continued. KQED halted the distribution of the series and book (see this current book’s Introduction for the whole story).

In 1984, Dave founded Planetary Movers, an award-winning social experiment and commercial venture, well known for productive activism (e.g., on behalf of Nicaragua’s Sandinistas), as well as for pioneering practices of progressive employment, green marketing, and the sharing of a percentage of profits for peace and the environment.

In 1994, he started Our Farm. This community-supported agriculture (CSA) farm was also a teaching farm, based on sustainable practices, that hosted over 200 interns and apprentices from all over the world, and held regular tours for thousands of people. Our Farm grew as much as 100,000 pounds of food per acre, without a tractor, using only hand tools, on a terraced, 35-degree slope.

The International Institute for Ecological Agriculture (IIEA), founded by Dave in 1993, is dedicated to healing the planet while providing for the human community with research, education, and the implementation of socially just, ecologically sound, resource-conserving forms of agriculture—the basis of all sustainable societies. The IIEA teaches permaculture, an ethical system of ecological land design, which incorporates the disciplines of agriculture, hydrology, energy, architecture, economics, social science, animal husbandry, forestry, and others. Dave is currently Executive Director of the IIEA.

He has consulted for a wide array of clients, including governments, farmers, and companies interested in turning waste into valuable and profitable products. Recent work includes a feasibility study for a macadamia growers’ cooperative in Mexico, and a water harvesting/reforestation project in Antigua, West Indies. He is working with a farming college connected to the government of Ghana to develop alternative fuels, to train agricultural extension agents in organic farming, and to design an ecological strategy to stop the Sahara Desert from advancing. He also recently inspired the city of Urbana, Illinois, to hold a conference between builders, lenders, developers, municipalities, building inspectors, architects, and engineers, to coordinate the mainstreaming of natural building technologies. He has helped the Ford Motor Company demonstrate alcohol-fuel-powered vehicles at a series of U.S. events.

“Farmer Dave” is often called upon to testify before agencies on issues related to the land and democracy. He is a frequent speaker at ecological, sustainability, Peak Oil, and agricultural conferences in the Americas, and has appeared in interviews over 1000 times in print, radio, and television. Dave firmly believes in Emma Goldman’s view of, “If I can’t dance, I don’t want to be in your revolution,” and he can frequently be found on the dance floor when he isn’t flagrantly inciting democracy.

Dave is the author of the classic book, Alcohol Can Be a Gas!: Fueling an Ethanol Revolution for the 21st Century. He's the founder of Whiskey Hill Farms, where he grows high-value organic specialty crops, and Blume Industries, pioneers in regenerative agriculture methods and technologies, including turning agricultural waste into fuel, animal feed, carbon dioxide, and valuable industrial products.

Blume's 14-acre organic farm, Whiskey Hill Farms, is a hub where we design, innovate, develop, and share resources, education, technology, and services that accelerate adoption of regenerative agriculture practices.

Our goal is to develop low-cost, local-scale models of intelligently designed regenerative agricultural systems and promote their wide replication. Farmer/operators find our models at least as profitable as large agribusiness farming. Benefits to the community include enhanced and expanded economic development, ecological food production, organic fertility and water management, and energy resilience.

We focus on the practical use and understanding of new biological technology, regenerative methods, tools, and resources. Projects at the farm include a state-of-the-art local-scale alcohol distillery, and related products such as CO2, an integrated methane digester and marsh that provides input to make secondary alcohol, a process for creating complete balanced protein for animals or humans from plants, mariculture, fertilizer made from local agricultural waste, seaweed farming, greenhouse construction, soil heating with heat exchangers, and soil regeneration deep treatments and inoculations.

Together, working in our own communities, we can solve many of the systemic problems plaguing the Earth. We can quit polluting, stop the wars for oil, and move far, far away from fossil fuels forever.

Customer reviews

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Customers say

Customers find the book well-documented and comprehensive, with one review noting it includes lots of details and images. Moreover, they appreciate its readability, with one customer describing it as a "monumental piece of work." The book provides an informative argument for ethanol as a fuel source, with one customer highlighting its analysis of alternative energy practices. Additionally, customers value its sustainability aspects, with one review mentioning a sustainable plan for agriculture, and they consider it good value for money.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

39 customers mention "Information quality"37 positive2 negative

Customers find the book informative and well-documented, with lots of details and food for thought.

"...ethanol, automobiles and farming is intelligently discussed and well documented by Mr. Blume in this extraordinary book in a manner that is both..." Read more

"...I was amazed at the history lesson backed by facts which are indisputable...." Read more

"...A clean one to boot! This was an enjoyable and informational read. I am still in the process of putting my own still togther...." Read more

"The technical data, historical information and business information in this book definitely rate a 5 Star review...." Read more

21 customers mention "Readability"21 positive0 negative

Customers find the book readable and entertaining, with one describing it as a monumental piece of work.

"...Mr. Blume is not only an accomplished author but a very impressive speaker. He has a firm grasp of the subject matter both in depth AND breadth...." Read more

"...A clean one to boot! This was an enjoyable and informational read. I am still in the process of putting my own still togther...." Read more

"EXCELLENT. David Blume is on Coast to Coast am periodically, and that's what sent me here & (back again) for the book!..." Read more

"Good product, good price" Read more

19 customers mention "Energy content"19 positive0 negative

Customers find the book informative about ethanol as a fuel source, providing valuable information about its creation.

"...This book tells you a lot more about ethanol than how to use it as fuel. I was amazed at the history lesson backed by facts which are indisputable...." Read more

"...But that aside, there is a light at the end of the tunnel for a better energy soultion that can be a real answer. A clean one to boot!..." Read more

"...I believe it is a must have for anyone interested in ethanol as fuel (which should be everyone) among other reasons - to be able to debunk the anti-..." Read more

"...valuable information in here about ethanol creation and the harmful affects of gasoline so I would recommend the read, but do not let this book be..." Read more

6 customers mention "Sustainability"6 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's approach to sustainability, with one customer highlighting its self-sustaining system and another noting its firm foundation in permaculture principles.

"...to increase their profits as much as 10 fold while being more ecologically responsible and reducing our dependency on gasoline; for any groups..." Read more

"...that Blume is knowledgable in the aspects of ethanol creation and organic farming, but that leads to the question why doesn't Blume start his own..." Read more

"...Permaculture has a firm foundation in proper land use and continuous revitalization of the soil while generating a wide range of crops for fuel and..." Read more

"...energy issues, costs, long term hazards, this book presents a sustainable plan ... one that was in place and functioning well until Mssr...." Read more

5 customers mention "Value for money"5 positive0 negative

Customers find the book to be good value for money.

"...This is an excellent book to have." Read more

"Good product, good price" Read more

"This book is the best book I've read in a long time. It covers so much more than just ethanol production...." Read more

"...It' a must read!" Read more

4 customers mention "Functionality"4 positive0 negative

Customers find that the book's content works great, with one mentioning its practical applications.

"...This stuff works great! David Blume took great personal risk to see that these truths are no longer hidden from the public...." Read more

"...book presents a sustainable plan ... one that was in place and functioning well until Mssr. Rockefeller came along and performed his dastardly deeds...." Read more

"...It does work and would only be improved upon with support...." Read more

"...The book's strength is the depth of research and practical applications...." Read more

3 customers mention "Alcohol content"0 positive3 negative

Customers have mixed feelings about the alcohol content in the book.

"Alcohol is a gas..." Read more

"This Book Rocks!!!! Alcohol is a Gas...." Read more

"Alcohol Can Be a Gas..." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on September 6, 2010
    I had the pleasure of attending Dave Blume's ethanol workshop in Nashville, Tennessee in March of 2010. Mr. Blume is not only an accomplished author but a very impressive speaker. He has a firm grasp of the subject matter both in depth AND breadth. He was very good at answering many questions from the participants, some of a difficult nature, with the ease and tact that are only possible by an expert.

    The book itself is a masterpiece combining the best of reference material with good organization and writing style. I was so inspired by this book that I am planning on creating a permaculture system based on the one described therein. Mr. Blume clearly explains the benefits of localized production of both food and fuel and dispenses quickly the myths that abound regarding food versus fuel. Those myths are based on the current scheme whereby farmers are heavily subsidized to manufacture corn in wasteful, industrialized agricultural techniques that have proven to be totally non-sustainable. However, the good news, that Dave brings to the discussion, is that it does not have to remain this way. There are many better ways of growing corn and, in fact, there are many better feedstocks as well, for creating ethanol, many of which will grow on marginal farm land. Mr. Blume also quickly dispenses the myth that ethanol is not as good a fuel as the toxic oil refinery by-product called 'gasoline'.

    The history, technology and economics of ethanol, automobiles and farming is intelligently discussed and well documented by Mr. Blume in this extraordinary book in a manner that is both objective and entertaining.

    I highly recommend this book to anyone remotely interested in learning the truth about a more sustainable fuel and food future for the US and the world. If you have a desire to become part of the solution, get this book and start practicing its suggestions.
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  • Reviewed in the United States on March 6, 2012
    Thank you David Blume for writing this book!

    This book tells you a lot more about ethanol than how to use it as fuel. I was amazed at the history lesson backed by facts which are indisputable. This book really gave me an understanding of WHY things are the way they are today. It made me think about everything I have been told and realize that most of it has been lies.

    Rather than just believe the media, I am now testing ethanol in my own vehicles to find the truth that David Blume is right! This stuff works great!

    David Blume took great personal risk to see that these truths are no longer hidden from the public. You should support him by purchasing his book and finding the truth for yourself.
    4 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on August 3, 2010
    To be honest, I was looking to save money on fuel costs. I walked away with much more than that.
    To understand how the typical myths about Ethonal are just lies was priceless.
    The book for my prespective was written from a "left of center view". I did not care for the jabs at former President Bush. But that aside, there is a light at the end of the tunnel for a better energy soultion that can be a real answer. A clean one to boot!

    This was an enjoyable and informational read. I am still in the process of putting my own still togther. I hope to have it together soon.
    5 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on April 7, 2014
    The technical data, historical information and business information in this book definitely rate a 5 Star review. However, the infuriating and incorrect political rants rate a "No Star" evaluation. If you can ignore the left wing, liberal propaganda and stick to the "meat" of the book this tome is a must have for information and future reference. It belongs in a library despite the "blame the republicans and Bush" diatribes folded within its useful data. After all, anyone with any sense knows that BOTH sides, liberal and conservative, democrat and republican, got us where we are right now. Stop blaming and get on with fixing. Using the information in this book is a step in that direction.

    If you want a business you can do yourself, a farm you can run yourself, a way to help the economy, environment and yourself. This is an excellent book to have.
    10 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on August 16, 2013
    step-by-step instructions on all steps of creating alcohol from organic feedstock. david blume discusses not only common techniques and tricks for fermenting alcohol, but also neat little, "you might want to try...." to give you ideas and spark your imagination. my impression reading this book is that blume really intends it to be a comprehensive resource and starting impetus to get everyone creating their own ethanol-based fuel. excellent resource for the amateur or pro!

Top reviews from other countries

  • S. Alex Percival
    5.0 out of 5 stars Very well displayed book
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 23, 2013
    This book met all my expectations. It had relevant chapters and well explained articlcles. Could be used lightly for some extra info or to further your interest to building your own distillery!
  • Hempman
    5.0 out of 5 stars Problem Solver
    Reviewed in Canada on September 12, 2014
    If you want to solve the energy problem here you go. Why are we not forming an energy policy and doing everything that is in this book? This is all proven and known technology. Any questions you may have are answered in this book. Lots of reference material also.
  • RAVeman
    5.0 out of 5 stars Great read
    Reviewed in Canada on July 8, 2016
    Lots of great info
  • Amazon Customer
    5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 24, 2014
    A "blast" of a big book to work through.
  • Martin Alac
    5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
    Reviewed in Canada on December 26, 2014
    Great book. Covers a wide variety of topics on alcohol production.