Monthly Archives: December 2025

Using Weapons in Stories

By Terry C. Misfeldt

When any of your characters need a weapon of some type, keep in mind there are four basic categories for needing a weapon:

Provision

Protection

Recreation

Aggression

Let’s start with provision weaponry. If your character is responsible for providing food for their family, tribe, or themselves, a firearm is often the most effective weapon for them to use. Wild animals such as deer or bear can be slain with a rifle, but a compound or recurve bow or a crossbow can also harvest an animal.

Slingshots, traps, and smaller weapons can also harvest food but generally smaller prey such as squirrels, mourning doves, or rabbits. A BB gun or .22 rifle/pistol also provide killing power. It is not my intent to gross you out about killing animals but as your character is charged with providing food, these are tools of their trade.

Early humans, depending on the time period of your story, used spears and more primitive weapons to obtain food for their relatives, kinsfolk, or families. Of course, most people today obtain their food from shopping at a grocery store or meat market.

IMPORTANT: Any hunter charged with providing food knows that the best course of action is one shot-one kill. Pursuing or searching for a wounded animal is never good for the animal or the hunter. The distance from the hunter’s position to where the prey is situated is the critical variant in success.

My basic formula is that the length of the barrel and projection power equal accuracy over distance. If you are shooting at an elk, for example, that is 200 yards away, you need a high caliber rifle (.30-.06 for one) that can reach and kill that elk at that distance.

Next week: Protection.