What are some good books I should read?

What are some good books I should read?

The Iron Heel, and Invitation To A Beheading would be a great start

Thank you, Ill look into it

Brave new world
The food of the gods
Animal farm
Nazi sozi
Mein Kampf
This should be a good start

Kama sutra

Thanks Vishnu

The Sun Also Rises

Hemingway was redpilled as fuck

Before the thread gets hijacked by idiots and shitposters

>Camp of the Saints
European migrant crisis as French speculative fiction written in the 70s. Excellent look at what it is about western culture that's allowing it to decay from within and the pressure from without that are going to burst through.
>The Fifth Head of Cerberus
Incredible novel on the importance of understanding your roots and the influence of dialectics and cultural clashes. Extra relevant to Australians because post-colonialism is such a prominent theme.
>Basic Economics
Don't be a stupid. It's all very simple if you read this end to end.
>Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community
Sociology is extremely important and you need to know why things seem to be breaking down and why people seem to be becoming antisocial dicks.
>Prometheus Rising
A minor unhinging can actually do you a lot of good. Thinking about how you think is perfectly healthy.
>The Technological Society (Jacques Ellul, not Ted Kaczynski)
UNABOMBER's Manifesto for well-adjusted people. The true redpill is recognizing that the Luddites were right.
>The Best of Gene Wolfe
I can't shill this man hard enough. Engineer, Korean War veteran and devout Catholic. He's a fantastic prose stylist and a great source of traditionalist wisdom.

Hemmingway would have been a better writer if he'd accepted his latent homosexuality and let it influence his work. Did wonders for Mishima's writing.

There's only one good book son
The good book

>Basic Economics
By Thomas Sowell? Nigger Garbage. That's ape monkey shit Dr.Murdoch

It's not the be all and end all, but if there's one book you're going to read on the subject (and let's face it most anons will read 0 in their whole lives) it can't exactly hurt can it?

...

The Turner Diaries – Andrew MacDonald
Hunter – Andrew MacDonald
Propaganda – Edward L. Bernays
Storm of Steel – Ernst Jünger
The Glass Bees – Ernst Jünger
The International Jew – Henry Ford
Moby Dick – Herman Melville
The Jews – Hilaire Belloc
Propaganda: The Formation of Men's Attitudes – Jacques Ellul
The Camp of the Saints – Jean Raspail
The Culture of Critique – Kevin B. MacDonald
Racial Realities in Europe – Lothrop Stoddard
The Rising Tide of Color Against White World-Supremacy – Lothrop Stoddard
The Jews and Their Lies – Martin Luther
The Greater Britain – Oswald Mosley
The Alternative – Oswald Mosley
Europe: Faith and Plan – Oswald Mosley
The Decline of the West – Oswald Spengler
Hitler’s Revolution – Richard Tedor
Leviathan – Thomas Hobbes
Which Way Western Man? – William Gayley Simpson

This is an excellent list to show the average Sup Forums poster everything that he already believes either in language to crass or too advanced or esoteric to be useful. We can call it 'essential Jews and niggers are bad-core.'

Mein Kampf - any edition that hasn't been revised by the kikes.

There is the Stalag edition for English speakers.

The culture of critique by Stefan molyneux

My diary desu

It's not actually written by a sandnigger, depsite the pseudonym.
The main character is a likeable Nazi.
It makes fun of the Antifa-commies we see now.
It features lolis.

Off the top of my head, in no particular order

>Non-fiction
Napoleon The Great by Andrew Roberts
Storm of Steel by Ernst Junger
The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich by William Shirer
The Second World War by Winston Churchill
Mein Kampf by Adolf Hitler
The Communist Manifesto by Karl Marx
The Bible
The Qur'an
The Gallic Wars by Julius Caesar
The Republic by Plato
The Art of War by Sun Tzu
The Genealogy of Morals by Nietzsche
Beyond Good and Evil by Nietzsche
The Road to Wigan Pier by George Orwell

>Novels
Animal Farm by George Orwell
Catch-22 by Joseph Heller
The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoevsky
For Whom The Bell Tolls by Ernest Hemingway
The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway
Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury

Juliius Evola: Ride the Tiger

Thanks, this'll keep me going for a while