Posts Tagged

Literature

Essays

by Frederick Dixon I SUPPOSE I’m like most men in that shopping is not a favourite chore; as far as possible I try to decide exactly what I want, go in and get it and come out as quickly as possible. But, being a bookworm, I make an exception for bookshops and will browse at length before coming out, very often,…
Read More
Classic EssaysWilliam Pierce

by Dr. William L. Pierce FEODOR M. DOSTOEVSKY (pictured, 1821-1881) was one of Russia’s greatest writers. The son of a physician of modest means, he had the opportunity for an education, and was trained as an engineer. He remained close to the common people of Russia, however, in the experiences of his…
Read More
News

A growing online campaign aims to stop people reading books by white male authors. Martin Daubney believes it’s part of a worrying wider trend. IMAGINE, if you can, the unholy furore that would erupt if a white male author penned an article where he implored his readers to put a complete ban on buying…
Read More
Classic EssaysKevin Alfred Strom

A long out-of-print review by the great H.L. Mencken; a National Vanguard exclusive. by H.L. Mencken (pictured) EDITOR’S NOTE: This review, originally written in 1920, is highly relevant today. The type represented by Woodrow Wilson is all too common in academia, politics, journalism, and…
Read More
Classic Essays

by Nick Camerota I BEGAN READING The Camp of the Saints after a long and tiring day. Although I promised myself only a few chapters before retiring, I remained in the grip of Jean Raspail’s forceful, apocalyptic narrative until dawn. I finished it in one sitting. That was almost a month ago. Since…
Read More
Essays

by Chris Rossetti ALTHOUGH IT IS MARRED by a Nordicism that has the potential to divide North Americans of European descent, Wilmot Robertson’s The Dispossessed Majority is still a classic of prescience and analysis and well worth reading. It may be downloaded here, courtesy of Solar General.…
Read More
Classic Essays

by Vic Olvir IN THE PAST quarter-century or so a rather peculiar fate has befallen American literature: the tradition of the American novel begun by such illustrious names as Hawthorne, Melville, Twain, and James, and carried on by such as Fitzgerald [pictured], Faulkner, Hemingway, and Wolfe,…
Read More
Classic Essays

One of America’s most promising young poets, severed from her racial/cultural roots by the alien presence in the West, searched desperately to find those roots, then gave up in despair. by Vic Olvir
from National Vanguard, No. 97, October 1983, pp. 7–14
transcribed by Matthew Peters THIS PAST February…
Read More
Classic EssaysRevilo P. Oliver

Study of the censorship of one of Mark Twain’s best works shows us how much we have lost in recent decades. by Revilo P. Oliver UNDER HIS pseudonym, Mark Twain, Samuel L. Clemens (pictured) may be the most famous and widely-read American author. His celebrity is based primarily on two long stories…
Read More
Classic EssaysWilliam Pierce

by Dr. William L. Pierce FEODOR M. Dostoevsky (pictured, 1821-1881) was one of Russia’s greatest writers. The son of a physician of modest means, he had the opportunity for an education, and was trained as an engineer. He remained close to the common people of Russia, however, in the experiences…
Read More