The teams who created the 1st and 2nd edition English, German, and Czech printings of Inside the Archer have come together again, updating photography and design in an improved 3rd edition. A contemporary design and reworking of diagrams and figures make the most salient points jump off the page while retaining the original text.
It’s a pretty good explanation for NTS, however the language is unreasonably complicated and sometimes ambiguous. NTS overall imho over complicated and can be fully adopted only by a very few archers under a supervision of a coach.
This book may help professionals or very serious archers. However, there are two significant drawbacks.
1. For anyone wants to teach herself archery, the learning curve is too steep – if possible to progress at all. There are very detailed description about the movements. They are hard to understand; they can't be applied one by one to your shooting. You have to master all before applying them.
2. The bigger problem, in my humble opinion, is that this training method turns a living being into a shooting machine – precise but dead. It's possible that's the way for Olympic archer training; but it's not the archer I enjoyed.
In "Total Archery: Inside the Archer," Lee breaks down every aspect of Olympic archery technique with concise and clear instruction, accompanied by extremely informative photographs. The book contains 28 chapters covering topics such as stance, string alignment, and more. The content is well laid out, with a short overview of each chapter appearing at the end to drive home the chapter's key points. It's fascinating to see how many techniques and concepts in Olympic archery also appear in older forms of archery and Lee does a fantastic job of explaining ideas that are usually very difficult to explain. Will definitely be referring back to this in the future.
I’m a newbie archer, so some might argue that this book is over the top for me. I’d disagree. The ‘secret’ archery is to create a repeatable process, a very exact repeatable process. This covers that process, from the moment the arrow nocks to the follow through after the release. Is it a lot? Yes, but not a bad idea to be instilled with good habits from the start. It’s well written, with excellent summaries at the end of each chapter. I’ll be working through applying this for some months, but having read it, I have a working process to start with.
if you want to perfect your archery game, this is the resource. Highly accessible without being too technical and the perfect co.panion for any Archer at any skill level.