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HAC’S Personal Picks 1984 by George Orwell - If writers may be gifted with prophecy, Orwell had it. This book is absolutely essential to understanding the world we live in today— the abuse of language in the name of “political correctness”, the attempt to criminalize thought, the demand of complete, lockstep conformity with Big Brother. Read! A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess - The sparkling quasi-Russian slang alone makes this a joy to read, but beyond that we are once again confronted with an establishment attempt to penalize difference and enforce conformity, in this case through the use of biochemical behavior modification. The character of Alex is a shining monument to that irrepressible spirit of human depravity which can never be vanquished, his ultimate fate a triumph of man’s unconquerable will to destroy. The Complete Sherlock Holmes Stories by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle - Not only enjoyable as detective stories, but for the glimpse they offer into the late Victorian era which I personally believe to have been Aryan man’s pinnacle of achievement. Selected Works of Booth Tarkington - I can hear some of you now, saying “huh?” But I read Tarkington for relaxation, schmaltzy stuff like the Penrod series and Seventeen. I enjoy it because for a very brief time, I can return to a sane, stable, White America of peace and order and normal human relationships based on something besides psychopolitical power games, political correctness, “diversity”, the desperate scramble for money, or deviate sexual acts. We’ve pretty much forgotten what such a world is like, I’m afraid. It helps to go back now and then. Selected Works of H.P. Lovecraft - An Aryan fantasist and a genuine mystic, in my view second only to Edgar Allan Poe. Liberal revisionists have desperately tried to “clean up” Lovecraft’s open Aryan racialism in the years since his death in 1937, but it ain’t gonna fly. Lovecraft was one of us, all right. Selected Works of H. L. Mencken - Another one of our people’s long-forgotten literary heroes and philosophers. Sometimes called the Sage of Baltimore and “the Will Rogers of Fascism”. Complete Works of William Shakespeare - No comment necessary, forsooth. Oddsbodikins!

HAC’S Personal Picks 1984 by George Orwell - If writers may be gifted with prophecy, Orwell had it. This book is absolutely essential to understanding the world we live in today— the abuse of language in the name of “political correctness”, the attempt to criminalize thought, the demand of complete, lockstep conformity with Big Brother. Read! A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess - The sparkling quasi-Russian slang alone makes this a joy to read, but beyond that we are once again confronted with an establishment attempt to penalize difference and enforce conformity, in this case through the use of biochemical behavior modification. The character of Alex is a shining monument to that irrepressible spirit of human depravity which can never be vanquished, his ultimate fate a triumph of man’s unconquerable will to destroy. The Complete Sherlock Holmes Stories by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle - Not only enjoyable as detective stories, but for the glimpse they offer into the late Victorian era which I personally believe to have been Aryan man’s pinnacle of achievement. Selected Works of Booth Tarkington - I can hear some of you now, saying “huh?” But I read Tarkington for relaxation, schmaltzy stuff like the Penrod series and Seventeen. I enjoy it because for a very brief time, I can return to a sane, stable, White America of peace and order and normal human relationships based on something besides psychopolitical power games, political correctness, “diversity”, the desperate scramble for money, or deviate sexual acts. We’ve pretty much forgotten what such a world is like, I’m afraid. It helps to go back now and then. Selected Works of H.P. Lovecraft - An Aryan fantasist and a genuine mystic, in my view second only to Edgar Allan Poe. Liberal revisionists have desperately tried to “clean up” Lovecraft’s open Aryan racialism in the years since his death in 1937, but it ain’t gonna fly. Lovecraft was one of us, all right. Selected Works of H. L. Mencken - Another one of our people’s long-forgotten literary heroes and philosophers. Sometimes called the Sage of Baltimore and “the Will Rogers of Fascism”. Complete Works of William Shakespeare - No comment necessary, forsooth. Oddsbodikins!

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