What are you reading

Started by Tenebracid, January 15, 2012, 08:40:21 PM

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BlackCavendish

#1110
I don't know if it's available in English, but Abel Posse's "El viajero de Agartha" is a great novel set in the last days of World War II, where an SS officer is sent to search for Agarthi in a desperate attempt to reverse the course of the war.

I read it in Italian, but to be honest, I don't know if there's an English translation.

Also you should definitely check out "Beasts, Men and Gods" by Ferdynand Ossendowski (it's is a semi-mythical chronicle of his escape from Russia during the civil war, with references to elements of folklore and myth (the King of the World, Baron Ungern, etc.).

Johann

Quote from: host body on March 11, 2025, 03:44:07 PMDoes anyone have any recommendations for literature with an old school industrial / neofolk aesthetic? I don't mean politically, but maybe set in the ruins of Europe or Japan and with a melancholic, esoteric and dark feel to it? I have read Celine and Ernst Junger, but maybe looking for something more mystical an vague rather than memoirs.

I think you should expand your reading of Jünger, he becomes more mystical after Storm Of Steele.

I'd recommend both "On the Marble Cliffs" and "the Glass bees" which are both easy to find on NYRB who republished them this year. Jünger is largely suspected to have been dealing with post traumatic stress disorder following world war 1 and using opioids. The "fascist" years I think are given more importance than I think they deserve, the man lived 102 years after all. He began experimenting with psychedelics and other drugs around the time he wrote "The Adventurous Heart" which had an impact on Albert Hoffmann who discovered LSD. This book of short prose and dreams makes a departure for Jünger away from military memoir into a more esoteric/science fiction/magical-realist and philosophical dimension. Technology is a major focus of Jüngers as is surveillance. I would not categorize any of his (fictional) writings following Adventurous Heart as memoir.

Adventurous Heart and his great final work which is "Eumeswil" can be found at Telos-Press.

I've not read Danilo Kis yet, but am eagerly awaiting the reissue of "Tomb for Boris Davidovich" on Dalkey Archive, if you like Ebooks that is available now.

Kis is Serbian writer from the Yugoslavia area, his writing concerns living under a Stalinist style state and using Borges style elements. I think if you're interested in European ruin the Balkans as a region shouldn't be discounted. Unfortunately I don't know enough about other authors in that region to steer you further into fiction on the subject.

Other authors I think you might find interesting for the apocalypse in Europe themes are as already mentioned Sorokin, I did not like the "Ice Trilogy" but am enjoying "Dispatches From The District Committee", I also think Laszlo Krasznahorkai who wrote "Satantango", he's also contemporary and most of his books are in print.

Two final authors that may interest you are Leon Bloy, who wrote about French life during the Franco Prussian war, a fanatical nationalist. His admirers include Jünger, and Carl  Schmitt. Wakefield Press released recent translations of "Disagreeable Tales" and "Sweating Blood" which are both short story collections, but more of a vignette than what we think of as short story. Highly recommend, brutal stuff.

Finally, Varlam Shalamov, who served 10 years in the Gulags. Both as a miner and then as a medic, NYRB released two collections of his (again, more vignette than short story) writings called "Koylma Tales" and "Sketches of the Criminal World". These are both brutal and occasionally funny (in the blackest sense) accounts of life in the gulags, the day to day structure and internal class systems.

I don't think the Turner Diaries will be appealing. Those this anti terrorism report on its themes is more interesting than the book and breaks down a lot of its themes and aesthetic considerations. I don't think it's as much esoteric as infamous and it doesn't deal with post war Europe.

https://icct.nl/sites/default/files/import/publication/ICCT-Berger-The-Turner-Legacy-September2016-2.pdf

Happy reading.


cantle

Quote from: Hakaristi on October 02, 2024, 03:57:36 PMNeo-Nazi Terrorism and Countercultural Fascism: The Origins and Afterlife of James Mason's Siege by antifascist warrior Spencer Sunshine.

Apparently been nearly a decade in the making and is indeed exhaustively researched as the author had full access to Mason's meticulous archive of letters, clippings, etc. Features chapters on Boyd Rice, Adam Parfrey (subtitled "A Neo Nazi's Best Friend"!), Nikolas Schreck, Michael Moynihan and others of the so-called "Abraxas Clique". Obviously heavily biased but still a good read on the history of fringe US politics with a surprising amount of coverage of 90s industrial culture. Essentially blames Feral House and the underground for promoting and keeping this terrorist handbook relevant. Thought there'd be more on those wacky Atomwaffen kids though, seeing as they resurrected Mason in his later years.

Just read this myself. I think he fails to make a strong enough link from the 80/90s counterculture to the Atomwaffen crowd. Given how well the 60/70s Neo Nazi scene is documented, the opposite is true for post 2010, which (imo) weakens his argument.

Now where can I buy a copy of Siege to see what all the fuss is about...?