Protect Yourself With Your Snubnose Revolver

Protect Yourself With Your Snubnose Revolver

As an individual trying to learn a new platform, I’ve done quite a bit of reading on revolvers. Some of this has been historical, some has been quite technical, and some has been good, old fashioned how-to. One of the best books I’ve read on the topic of running a defensive revolver is Grant Cunningham’s excellent Protect Yourself With Your Snubnose Revolver.

If you’re not familiar with Grant Cunningham, you should be. Grant comes about as close as anyone to the being “The” Revolver Guy these days. Though now lamentably retired, he is known as one of the best revolver gunsmiths around. He is also a nationally-known (and thankfully un-retired) trainer, and has written a number of books on revolvers specifically and handguns generally. So it was no accident that I picked up his most recent work concerning revolvers. I wanted to know what Grant Cunningham knows. Having just missed his last few live training dates due to scheduling conflicts (though you can bet I’ll try to be in his November class!), this seemed like the next-best thing.

Protect Yourself With Your Snubnose Revolver

Protect Yourself With Your Snubnose Revolver is a fairly definitive tome. It begins with some snubnose basics: advantages and disadvantages, manual of arms, and revolver and ammunition selection. The next big section of the book covers “Defensive Shooting Concepts.” I feel that this portion of Protect Yourself addresses a lot of the “intangibles” of defensive shooting: mindset, decision-making, and understanding the difference between possible, plausible, and likely scenarios†.

The book continues with technique. Grant covers how to draw and reholster, grasp the revolver, work the trigger, aim, and reload. All of the basics of using a revolver for defensive purposes are covered, making this an excellent beginner volume. He also includes a number of excellent shooting drills, many of which I’ve incorporated into my practice routine.

Protect Yourself with your Snubnose Revolver

Grant Cunningham speaks my language. He is a non-nonsense writer, and every sentence is crafted with precision. As an example, Grant chooses to call the way you hold a revolver your “grasp” rather than “grip.” This is to avoid confusion when discussing the easily-confused topics of technique (grip or grasp) and hardware (grips or stocks), and this is a terminology that I am going to try to adopt here. In addition to a precise writing style, the information presented is no-nonsense and thoughtful.

This book doesn’t contain everything – there are a few things that are notable for their absence. For example, you won’t find hyperbole. You won’t find bravado. You won’t find a bunch of hollow mantras or any “advanced” techniques. You won’t find the writings of a man who doesn’t acknowledge the limitations of the snubnose revolver. Instead all you will find is solid, time-tested advice from a man who knows what he’s talking about.

Practical Take-Away

This book is loaded with actionable information. I’m not going to steal the Protect Yourself‘s thunder by giving the whole thing away. I will, however, point to one major thing Grant changed my mind about in this book. As many of you have doubtlessly noticed, my 686 has worn Hogue finger-groove grips for a long time. I was even at the range a while back with Chris Baker who remarked, “you’re the only guy I know who actually shoots his revolvers AND uses those grips!”

Protect Yourself With Your Snubnose Revolver

Not any more. Grant definitely convinced me of the importance of non-grooved (or at most, lightly-grooved) stocks on my revolvers. As Protect Yourself With Your Snubnose Revolver patiently explains, finger grooves don’t help your grip grasp, and can actually hurt it. To provide any advantage at all, they would have to fit your hand perfectly. Obviously, the likelihood of this is pretty low. Even if they do fit your fingers perfectly, you may not get a perfect grasp when you draw the revolver, which would again make them counterproductive. Because of this I recently installed a suitable set of non-grooved revolver stocks on my 686, and you can expect a review of those very soon.

The Bottom Line

If you are a revolver guy you need to read this book. A while back I picked up a saying I really like: “I never met a man I couldn’t learn something from or teach something to,” and Grant definitely taught me something. Even if you are a much more experienced revolver shooter you probably have something to learn from Protect Yourself With Your Snubnose Revolver. If you are a new revolver shooter every page of this work may well be an epiphany. It will definitely start you down the right path.

†This was one of my bar-none favorite portions of this work.

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Author: Justin

Justin Carroll is a former MARSOC Marine and veteran of both Iraq and Afghanistan. Leaving service after eight years in the U.S. Marines, Justin continues his involvement with a variety of government agencies to this day. Justin began RevolverGuy.com in late 2016 with an simple idea: provide an source of high-quality information for revolver enthusiasts.

7 thoughts on “Protect Yourself With Your Snubnose Revolver”

  1. Justin,

    Thanks for the review. I have read Grant’s earlier “Defensive Revolver Fundamentals.” I really like that he takes the time in that book to explain what training/practice should accomplish. Of course some of this is opinion, but he gives really strong reasons for looking critically at your training/practice; if it isn’t working on accuracy, combining accuracy and speed, or making decisions under stress, you probably need to put some thought into why you are doing it.

    If fact, that is indicative of the whole book; it’s not just a list of his opinions written as rules. It is a well reasoned explanation of why his technique/opinion is valid and how adopting it will benefit you. I don’t find myself disagreeing with much, but, if I did, I would have the information and context to fully evaluate my approach vs Grant’s. Few authors I have encountered take the time to truly explain the reasoning for why they give the advice they do.

    — Greyson

    1. Greyson,
      Thanks for the feedback! I struggle at writing book reviews, but it sounds like you nailed what I was trying to get across. I agree that some of Grant’s stuff is opinion; he and I disagree pretty strongly about dry-practice, for instance. But like you said, the vast majority of his material is extremely thoughtful and fact-driven.
      Thanks again!
      Justin

  2. Thanks for the reviews, book looks very worthwhile.
    I’ve long used Hogue’s finger grooved grips on my round but S&W K-frame revolvers, purely because of my ability to have it in my “proper grasp” when I am deploying it. While they are not as “comfortable” as my smooth grips, my shooting scores have always been significantly better with them, than any other grips I have for those revolvers!
    As an older dog that started out in law enforcement with a revolver,this is a great new website and full of great resources.

  3. I have read all of Grant’s revolver books and find his approach to be geared to ” real life ” survival ,not the special forces fantasies encountered in many other training books. A great book for anyone who wants to learn how to run a snub and use it to defend themselves.

  4. Justin,
    I just discovered this site and have enjoyed it thoroughly thus far. A little background about me. I left the military a few years ago and entered private security. I am the only one at my company that uses a revolver but I have never felt outgunned. When it comes to combat revolvers I believe the long discontinued S&W model 619 7 shot was the best duty revolver ever built. If Jetloader made 7 shot speedloaders it would be the perfect combination. Oh well it never hurts to wish. When it comes to Grant I believe he knows his stuff but he has always struck me as being very arrogant. I could be wrong though. Anyway great site and good luck to ya.

    1. Thanks, for writing in, Russ! It’s good that there’s a few guys out there still relying on wheelguns! Personally I’m not fan of the 7-shooters because the cylinder travel is shorter than when I’m used to and it messes with me, but I bet I’d get used to it after using one for a while.

      As far as Grant: I haven’t met the man but he is extremely precise in his speach which I think can scan as condescending. I actually really appreciate this – there’s no question in your mind what he meant when he said something. I’d say give him the benefit of the doubt if you can, and don’t discount the information because he definitely knows his stuff!

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