I would try to get hold of some old technology - you know - books that have been published through trade publishers. They tend to fact check and their editors tend to require the authors to test their recipes multiple times. In my opinion, one of the best wine making books is by Sheridan Warrick The Way to Make Wine, University of California Press. Your library may have this or be able to get a copy through ILL if they don't. This book focuses on grape wines.
Another good book is by CJJ Berry and his book focuses on country wines (wines made from fruit and flowers). First Steps in Wine Making. This was published by Argus Books in the 80's but it is still a solid read.
BUT to make wine you simply add appropriate yeast to fruit that you have crushed to expose the fruit inside the skin to the yeast, allow the yeast to ferment all the sugars in the fruit and then press the fruit to expel all the juice. You then allow that wine to quietly age for a few months and then bottle. You can make that process simpler by buying juice. And you can make this process less prone to chance by feeding the yeast nutrients (most fruit does not have enough nutrients for the yeast to ferment without creating some problems). And you can make the wines you make taste better by adding tannin and acidity if the fruit is short of either - and it often is. Wine is usually drunk when it is about 12% alcohol by volume (beer might be 3-5%) so you might need to add sugar to the fruit since most fruit has only about half the amount of sugar to ferment to that level of alcohol. (wine grapes being an exception).
If you want to experiment - even today, you might buy a gallon of Motts apple juice (it has no chemical preservatives that will kill yeast) and you might simply remove a cup of the juice and add a packet of wine yeast (yeast cultured by a lab for making wine) . Screw the cap on VERY loosely (or simply plug the mouth of the container with cotton wool and wait three weeks or so until the yeast has fermented all the sugar into alcohol. This will be bone dry (not at all sweet) so you may want to add some sugar to sweeten this (perhaps 4 oz) but if you simply add sugar to the gallon of cider you have made the yeast will ferment that too so you need to "stabilize" the beverage (usually with the addition of chemical stabilizers that prevent the yeast from reproducing and prevent them from continuing to ferment the available sugars. But in 3 weeks you will have made a low alcohol apple wine known as cider. It'll be about 5-6% alcohol by volume (ABV). But for the price of a gallon of Mott's you will have made a cider that is quite delicious. And you would have achieved this without any equipment or any real understanding of the processes involved