AudioAudio BooksWilliam Pierce

The Fame of a Dead Man’s Deeds Audio Book: World War II

by Bradford L. Huie
for The American Mercury

THIS WEEK Robert Griffin’s The Fame of a Dead Man’s Deeds — read this week by Vanessa Neubauer in our continuing audio book series — deals with Dr. William Luther Pierce’s views on the watershed event of the last 100 years: the Second World War. (ILLUSTRATION: American bombers rain death and destruction on Europe.)

Click here for all the chapters of this book that we’ve published so far.

Was World War II “the Good War” as we’ve been taught? Were the Germans the chief villains and the Jews the main victims? What were the consequences of the war, and the wartime propaganda created to justify it? Were the war’s worst atrocities actually committed after the war, by the victors? You’re about to find out.

Today we rejoin Vanessa Neubauer in her reading of this week’s installment, chapter 21, of Professor Robert S. Griffin’s masterful biography of Dr. William Luther Pierce, The Fame of a Dead Man’s Deeds.

How did Dr. Pierce, an American scientist and academic, come to found the most influential racial-nationalist organization in America? What were his goals? To what extent did he succeed? Listen in to this fascinating intellectual journey by pressing the play button above (or at the end of this article).

This audio book will be published in weekly chapter installments on The American Mercury and will be available from the Mercury as a full-length audio book when the series is completed.

One of the most original — and controversial — thinkers of the 20th century was White nationalist, novelist, and founder of a new European religion, Cosmotheism, Dr. William L. Pierce.

The only real biography of Dr. Pierce is Professor Robert S. Griffin’s The Fame of a Dead Man’s Deeds, which was published in 2001. This week we continue with the 21st chapter — “World War II” — of the book. Experience William Pierce, the writer, the philosopher, the radical — and the builder of an intentional White community in the mountains of West Virginia — just as Robert Griffin experienced him, by pressing the play button now.

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Source: The American Mercury

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