/Pol approved books

What are some Sup Forums approved books?

The secret relationship between blacks and Jews

Here is my list:
Anthony Ludovici - A Defense of Aristocracy
H.L. Mencken - A Mencken Chrestomanthy
E.M. Cioran - A Short History of Decay
Tomislav Sunic - Against Democracy and Equality: The European New Right
T.S. Eliot - Christianity & Culture
Joseph Goebbels - Communism with the mask of Bolshevism in Theory and Practice
The Jewish Theological Seminary of America - Emet Ve-Emunah: Statement of principles of Conservative Judaism
Juan Donoso Cortés - Essays on Catholisim, Liberalism and Socialism
Corneliu Zelea Codreanu - For my Legionaries
G.K. Chesterton - Heretics
Ulrick Varange - Imperium
Ernst Jünger - In Stahlgewittern
Theodore Kaczynski - Industrial Society and its Future
Lothrop Stoddard - Into the Darkness
Thomas Hobbes - Leviathan
Manifesto for an European Renaissance - Alain de Benoist
Men Among the Ruins - Julius Evova
Might is Right - Ragnar Redbeard
On Heroes, Hero-Worship & the Heroic in History - Thomas Carlyle
On liberty - John Stuart Mill
Origins and Doctrine of Fascism - Giovanni Gentile
Parlament of Whores - P.J. O’Rourke
Pawns in the Game - William Guy Carr
Political Theology - Carl Schmitt
Popular Government - Sir Henry Maine
Propaganda - Edwaed L. Bernays
Reflections on Violence - Georges Sorel
Reflections on the Revolution in France - Edmund Burke
Revolt Against the Modern World - Julius Evova
Ride the Tiger - Julius Evova
Rules for Radicals - Saul Alinsky
Te closing of the American Mind - Allan Bloom
The Abolition of Britain - Peter Hitchens
The Alternative - Oswald Mosley
The Art of War - Sun Tzu
The Biocentric Worldview - Ludwig Klages
The Bow of Ulysses - James Anthony Froude
The Constitution of Liberty - Friedrich A. Hayek
The Counter-Revolution - Thomas Molnar

Patrick Buchanan - The Death of the West
Oswald Spengler - The Decline of the West
Alexander Dugin - The Fourth Political Theory
Rousas John Rushdoony - The Insitutes of Biblical Law
Theodor Herzl - The Jewish State
Savitri Devi - The Lightning and the Sun
René Guénon - The Reign of Quantity & the Signs of the Times
Plato - The Republic
José Ortega y Gasset - The Revolt of the Masses
Jonathan Haidt - The Righteous Mind
A.J.P. Taylor - The origins of the Second World War
Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson - Why Nations Fail
Guillaume Faye - Why We Fight

You can't read in Polish so technically you can fuck off... (sadface.tiff)

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>implying any of you read the philosophy books that you post in these threads

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Tl dr lol

Had sex tho

THE TURNER DIARIES

Thanks, lads.

Before Sup Forums - After/pol/

1984 and Brave New World

Already read 1984. Great book! I'll try Brave New World

if you are reading anything other than classics you are losing ground to those that do

read this in high school. I don't think I was mature enough to appreciate it

who has time for literature, just read non-fiction especially history and philosophy

there have been a few list kicking around for a while but not sure how up to date they are

this is old and has some pretty questionable inclusions

My personal picks:
Robert Greene - The 48 Laws of Power
Robert Greene - The 33 strategies of War
Niccolo Macchiavelli - The Prince
Sun Tsu - The Art of War

It is important that one should understand the nature of power.

On my list:
Saul Alyisky - Rules for Radicals
Miyamoto Musashi - The Book of 5 Rings

I would also VERY much recomend this book, its written for people with a college level understanding of history and the sheer volume of data, reference and academic terms might turn off new readers. That said the way Clarke uses evidence is excellent and the conclusions that he comes to are pretty decent from this board's point of view

Brave New World was written as a metaphor to industrialism during the industrial revolution, hence why the main character's name is Bernard (((Marx))).