The ax is an indispensable tool for every woodsman. The Ax Book is a thorough guide to cutting wood with hand tools. Even those who use chainsaws and other power equipment need to be familiar with the hand tools of their craft. An ideal resource for anyone who wants to fell trees and take lumber or firewood from the wood lot or forest. The author explains how to use various types of axes, hatchets, mauls, saws, and wedges, and their use and care to take down trees, section and split and prepare firewood. In addition he shows every aspect of dealing with wood from the forest right to the hearth or stove.
If you need to know more about the tools of the woodsman, particularly the ax, this book covers the gambit. Given the current (odd, IMO) trendiness of the lumberjack as reflected in the "lumbersexual" I could imagine many a poseur sitting in a coffee house with this book in front of them - that said, this book is chock full of actual, actionable information that just might lead a self-identifying lumbersexual into the honest world of the woodcutter.
I learned about this from "The Scythe Book" and it's such a wonderful work! Written in an engaging way, but also very much a "how-to," as a recent transplant to the woods of upstate New York, it's proved invaluable in my engagement with axes (though admittedly I haven't taken on any projects more complicated than segmenting downed trees or splitting wood for the stove).
I love sharp things. The fact that (in addition to the author) I almost chopped my foot off with an axe when I was 17, hasn't really dampened my desire for the sublimely sharp. I read this book a few years ago and still tell stories out of on a regular basis. In addition to axes, it also relates great facts about saws and their uses. I used the information in this book to sharpen a 10 foot cross-cut saw when I lived out west...though, it did take me about a month. Also useful are the techniques of felling trees, which are just as useful with a chainsaw as anything else and have proved wonderful advice.