>>481933Google searches will call up a lot of stuff. The trick is knowing what to search. Here's some ideas:
-archery finger shooting
-traditional archery form
-archery back tension (for form as opposed to releases)
-traditional archery stance
-how to grip bow
-traditional archery draw
-traditional archery anchor points
-archery instinctive shooting
-archery gap shooting
-archery aiming
So on and so forth. Basically, you want to learn how to stand, how to hold the bow, how to draw and draw to a consistent spot (anchor point), how to hold the string (finger shooting), how to "aim" (in quotes because archery aim is not quite what you think when you think "aiming" as holding a sight super steady on target), how to release (back tension and relaxing your hand), and how to release consistently. There's probably some other stuff.
For books, I'd look at "Traditional Archery" by Fred Asbell and "Idiot Proof Archery" by Bernie Pellerite. The latter has a lot on compound shooting, but also talks about traditional and some of the stuff overlaps anyway.