Posts Tagged
Book reviews

Hellstorm: A Review
Hamburg, Germany, 1945: Thousands upon thousands of families with women and children lived in these apartment buildings before they were burned alive by American and British bombers. It was the most deadly and destructive war in human history. Millions were killed, billions in property was destroyed,…

Relentless Rebecca
by Revilo P. Oliver THE NEW MEANING OF TREASON, which I cited in the foregoing article [see Liberty Bell, June 1988], is a peculiar book. It poses a psychological problem of some interest. Cicily Fairfield, later Mrs. Henry Maxwell Andrews, chose to call herself “Rebecca West,” taking…

A Training Manual for ‘Racists’
by Revilo P. Oliver THE NATIONALIST PARTY of Canada has adopted, as a training manual for recruits to our racial cause, an odd book, which, I suspect, libels its officers. In so doing, they evinced, I think, a sound sense of tactics. The book of 397 pages is entitled Is God a Racist? The Right-Wing in Canada…

The Mongrel — and How the Jews Control Politicians
A review and commentary by David Sims of The Mongrel by Julius Streicher; first published in Der Sturmer I ADMIRE BOTH the skill and the courageous honesty with which Julius Streicher wrote. He was hanged after World War 2 for exercising his freedom of speech, during the war, in a way that the Jews did…

A Review of “The Mighty Dead: Why Homer Matters” by Adam Nicolson, Part 1
THE MIGHTY DEAD: Why Homer Matters is an example of that non-fiction genre so reviled by the anti-White establishment: books that celebrate the European past and the rich and world-transforming culture that emerged from it. Foundational to this culture are the Homeric epics, the Iliad and the Odyssey…

Tom Wolfe’s Back to Blood
by Andrew Hamilton Tom Wolfe Back to Blood: A Novel New York: Little, Brown and Company, 2012 TOM WOLFE’S Back to Blood is a quick read despite its 700-page length, and absorbing. Of his four novels, The Bonfire of the Vanities (1987) about race tensions in New York City is the most famous, but…

Alien Nation
One of William Pierce’s clearest explanations of the plight of White Americans, and the failure of upper-class Whites to do anything about it A review of Alien Nation: Common Sense about America’s Immigration Disaster by Peter Brimelow (pictured); published by Random House (New York,…