Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts

THUNDER FROM THE GODS: BRONZE AGE MINDSET BY BRONZE AGE PERVERT

Bronze Age Mindset
Bronze Age Pervert
(Self-published, June 2018)
198 Pages

Reviewed by Matt Forney

Two months ago, I bought Bronze Age Mindset, the debut book from dissident right figure and self-styled “aspiring nudist bodybuilder” Bronze Age Pervert, with the intent of reading it and reviewing it not long after. And yet, whenever I sat down and tried to put my thoughts into a comprehensible format, I ended up staring at a blank screen. Terror House Editor-at-Large (and my friend) Calvin Westra put it like this: “[Bronze Age Mindset] is a tough book to talk about [because] you either get it or you don’t, and explaining it to normies without ruining the magic of it is impossible.”

REVIEW: IF WE DO NOTHING

If We Do Nothing
Jared Taylor,
New Century Foundation,
254 Pages

Reviewed by Rémi Tremblay

Many Americans acknowledge the need for an open and honest discussion about race, but Jared Taylor has been doing exactly that for the last 25 years and that is why he has been so vilified. His honesty and his openness in discussing race and all the different aspects of race are the very reasons why those who hypocritically demand a conversation on race do not like him.

BOOK REVIEW: "CONFESSIONS OF AN ANTI-FEMINIST"

Confessions of an Anti-Feminist
by Anthony Ludovici
Counter Currents, 368 Pages
Available for purchase from Amazon

Reviewed by Rémi Tremblay

Counter-Currents recently published Confessions of an Anti-Feminist, an autobiography of the unique British novelist Anthony Ludovici (1882-1971). It is not, as I had at first assumed, a reprint or a subsequent edition, but rather the very first time this book has been published.

At Ludovici’s death, only two manuscripts existed, and it was by luck that one of these ended up in Nick Griffin’s hands, who then gave it to Counter-Currents.

REVIEW: "THE TRAIL OF THE VIKING FINGER"

Trail of the Viking Finger: A Northern Family Saga
by John Bean, Troubador Publishing, 228 Pages

Reviewed by Colin Liddell

I was amazed when John Bean, the veteran British nationalist, came out with an excellent novel a couple of years ago at the grand old age of 87. This even put Grandma Moses in the shade for late starts, and was a sign of hope to all those of us who continually defer our dreams. I was even more amazed that the novel, Blood in the Square, based on Bean’s own experiences in British nationalism in the 1960s, read so well.

REVIEW: FAUSTIAN MAN IN A MULTICULTURAL AGE

Faustian Man in a Multicultural Age
By Ricardo Duchesne
Arktos, 239 Pages

Reviewed by Rémi Tremblay

I had the chance to meet Professor Ricardo Duchesne a few years ago, before he launched the Council of Euro-Canadians blog. Thanks to his professorial approach, he made me grasp the depth of Antonio Gramsci's thoughts and how we should use his approach if we were to have success in reversing the current dominant culture. I am not ashamed to say that this meeting was one of the most influential ones in my own intellectual development. It is why I was particularly thrilled to learn that he had decided to pen a new book, his first one since he started being involved in the Canadian Alternative Right, if we can use that term. His book Faustian Man in a Multicultural Age met my expectations.

THE TEN COMMANDMENTS of PROPAGANDA: THE CULTURIST REVIEW

by Brian Anse Patrick
Arktos Publishing
204 pages

Reviewed by
John K. Press

I love the opening lines of Brian Anse Patrick’s book, The Ten Commandments of Propaganda. Published by Arktos, the book immediately tells the reader they’ve already been propagandized via the author evoking the Biblical Ten Commandments. Effective propaganda, Patrick explains, draws upon collective cultural memory.  His book is full of platitudes we really need to hear if we’re to be successful culturists and end multiculturalism.

NATIONALISM FOR ALL

El Salvador: A War By Proxy
Keith Preston, Black House Publishing, 145 Pages
Available for purchase from Amazon here

Reviewed by Gilbert Cavanaugh

A few weeks ago, I was reading Sam Francis's Essential Writings on Race at work, and a co-worker I knew to be an anarchist gave the book a queer look and asked about it. As you might imagine, our conversation did not proceed pleasantly. At one point I asked him what he made of the blood-and-soil movements left-wingers seem sympathetic to, such as the Zapatistas in Central America or the Basques in the Iberian Peninsula. He gave a non-answer, and the conversation petered out.