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Boys Life | 
| Publisher: Boys Life
List Price: $43.20 Buy New: $24.00 You Save: $19.20 (44%)
Rating: 7 reviews Sales Rank: 322
Format: Magazine Subscription Type: Consumer magazine Subscription Issues: 12 Subscription Length: 12 Months Issues Per Year: 12 First Issue Lead Time: 6-10 Weeks
ASIN: B00006LK8F
Availability: Usually ships in 1 to 3 months
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description (Ages 7-18) The award-winning magazine for all boys. Boys Life is dedicated to making a high-quality magazine. Includes articles on fiction, history, outdoors, non-fiction, science, sports and much more.
Abstract
A general interest magazine for boys, with articles on the outdoors, sports, etc. Published by the Boy Scouts of America.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 2 more reviews...
Worthwhile subscription November 7, 2007 donkee (USA) 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
My 8 year old son is obsessed with this magazine. He spends a good portion of his free time scouring over his new & back issues. It really keeps his attention & keeps him quiet! He always gets so excited when a new one comes. Well worth the $ if you have a boy who likes scouting.
Great Magazine June 8, 2006 apoem (Bosque Farms, NM USA) 14 out of 14 found this review helpful
This magazine is a great one. My son (age 7) looks for it in the mailbox and when it arrives he reads it cover to cover. He particularly likes the section about scouts saving their leaders or scouts helping scouts. It is an interesting book. It has badges you can earn at times and hints and helps and advice for a variety of scouting type activities and events. Enjoy. Well worth the money.
Great magazine! March 8, 2006 Judith Remmert 12 out of 13 found this review helpful
I was surprised at the low reveiws for this magazine and had to write to say that my three boys (ages 10 to 14) fight over who is going to read it first when an issue arrives. We've not subscribed to any other magazine that my boys are as enthusiastic about.
Earn a Don't Read Boys' Life Merit Badge March 18, 2005 Christopher S. Loucks (Colorado Front Range) 8 out of 20 found this review helpful
I haven't touched this magazine in over a decade. I used to read it every time I got an issue in my parents' mailbox. Of course, by read, I mean I would skip through the articles that taught me nothing and head over to the comics. Dink and Duff were my favorite, although not laugh-out-loud funny. I recently skimmed through Webelos Woody, The Tracy Twins, Peewee Harris, and the sometimes hilarious Pedro. When I was even younger, I used to spend a *lot* of time perusing the junk pages, where you could order 8 pranks for the price of a dollar or something. Now, as an alternative, I highly recommend going through the Boy Scout Handbooks with your kids. The Cub Scout handbooks are just as interesting as the Boy Scout ones, and they actually teach you about health, staying fit, learning knots, Fire safety, backpacking/camping tips, etc. I don't know how the modern Boys' Life compares to the old issues, but it seems like it's fallen for the same virus as every other magazine I've stopped ordering: advertisements.
If there was an option for zero stars this would earn it! January 7, 2005 4KidsLater (Southwest Virginia) 16 out of 25 found this review helpful
This magazine is inundated with advertising. The few articles that do exist are saturated with trend ideals and sparcely include the moral values that the Boy Scout organization is said to imply. I am disappointed that the BS organization is willing to be associated with such junk, and supports yet another venue for exploiting funds from its particpants.
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