I ate breakfast at a local rural greasy spoon a couple years ago and a man was wearing a cardboard sign around his neck the size of a license plate with deplorable written on it. He fit right in....I watched 10 secs of your video and I said, "I'm in!" I subscribed and commented. America, Its the deplorables who jump out of helicopters, rush into burning buildings, keep the lights on and feed us.Thank you, you made my day...
I’ve read Tulsi’s Book 😊 i go back to it often. I don’t mind rereading it. I’m currently reading Melania’s autobiography (on hoopla) and RFKs book “The Real Anthony Fauci”
That book is what made me a fan of RFKJ, and reinforced my belief that Fauci belongs in jail. And he didn't just write a bunch of words without backing it up. It must have at least a thousand references/citations.
@@klrbeech7054 yes, I’m still at the beginning but he provides so much information to very serious claims and backs it up with sources. Idk what’s going to happen with all of that but perhaps that’s why Fauci might be getting a “preemptive” pardon from Biden 😕
I randomly stumbled upon your channel the other day like a man in a dry rocky landscape happening upon a rattlesnake. Yet, to my surprise, it was not a snake; it was a happy little bunny which I gladly picked up. I look forward to your online book club.
Yes, I'm hoping to read Discrimination and Disparities by Sowell but also open to others too as I haven't read any yet (just finished college in a very liberal state and hadn't had much time to branch out)
@@bipslone8880 "hey i've been victimizing you and subverting your culture to plant roots of my own ideology into your children through mass indoctrination, but you noticing is really problematic for me so shut up and quit whining"
Cormac McCarthy in his entirety. Not really conservative in it's content explicitly but McCarthy was a right wing dude who the media is trying to now slander with baseless accusations (The accuser says she recognized him from a author picture which does not exist) conveniently right after he's dead and can't defend himself. He's a bit out there but The Sunset Limited, The Road, No Country For Old Men, and The Border Trilogy are good starting points. Christopher Ruocchio is making some amazing sci-fi with his Sun Eater series. Dan Simmons isn't really "conservative" and is pretty much a bog standard libertarian but The Hyperion Cantos, The Terror (Amazing TV adaptation too), as well as Drood, Illium, and Endymion are incredible. Also The Book Of The New Sun, one of the greatest series of novels ever made, rivals The Lord Of The Rings.
William F. Buckley’s Blackford Oakes spy thrillers, Robert Heinlein science fiction, and George Gillman’s Edge series of westerns are good places to start. Also Tom Clancy, Brad Thor and David Drake. Buckley and Gilman are out of print, but can be found on the internet. And chainslaughter231 is right. Cormac McCarthy is fantastic.
@@chainslaughter231 I love Cormac McCarthy! Terrible to hear that he was accused of SA. I hope the truth comes out and hopefully his name can be cleared.
The one you want to read is "The Conservative Mind" by Russell Kirk. However, an EXCELLENT primer for any high school or college age American is Kirk's "The Politics of Prudence". You cannot be an American Conservative without studying Russell Kirk.
@@hannie76 I second "The Conservative Mind." It is required reading for anyone interested in understanding Anglosphere (paleo-)conservatism. Another book I would recommend, both for itself as well as for its bibliography is Harold Bloom's "The Western Canon: The Books and the School of the Ages."
"People's Republic" by Kurt Schlichter. "Live Free or Die" by John Ringo. Alot of John Ringo books could be on a conservative fiction list. I used to love "The Last Centurion" by Ringo....but that was before Covid. Tom Kratmans'"Carrera" series is good for action and some philosophy as well.
Some good books I’d recommend as a conservative: Anything by Victor Davis Hanson. But “the Dying Citizen” is a must. Joe Abercrombie’s “Blade itself series.” And the sequel trilogy “The Age of Madness”. It basically demonstrates the terror of mob rule and communist revolutionary uprisings in a fantasy setting. Lonesome dove is a great book that gives an honest and brutal depiction of the cowboys and the Comanche war bands of the late 1800s. Anything by Gad Saad. Anything by Douglas Murray.
This is such a good idea and I really hope it takes off for you and becomes something big, important and moving. As a side note I used to read book series by a number of authors featuring the same characters over many books and noticed around 2020 all of the series started introducing “progressive” characters and plot lines that never existed before in a way that felt like these elements were always a part of the ongoing story line. Or, in some cases, inserting a progressive character that adds nothing to the story but keeps popping up. It felt, to me, these authors were told to do this. At this point I’ve given up on many authors I actually used to look forward to reading. What you are doing is necessary and I hope makes a difference.
Glad to see Tulsi's memoir is on the list! I know Candace Owens has written one too called "Blackout: How Black America Can Make Its Second Escape from the Democrat Plantation"; I have it on my Kindle and am hoping to begin reading it soon but assuming I enjoy it as much as I expect, I wouldn't mind revisiting it for a later book club :)
I love historical fiction (mostly Roman empire): "I, Claudius" and "Claudius the God" "The eagle in the snow" - the last days of the empire as seen through the eye of a young soldier. You feel like you were alive as the empire disintegrates. Also... "The Quaternary Vote: The Election of God's Successor" - God resigns and people have to elect the next king of the universe (very interesting premise, the author is well-read and an expert in many disciplines)
Right Wing Revolution by Charlie Kirk is a fantastic book for understanding conservative politics. Very easy to read as well, good for someone who doesn't read.
Same (although maybe not specifically focused on the Crusades for me). I love your RUclips handle, btw. I read a biography on Scipio Africanus for Historathon at the beginning of this year. I tend to gravitate towards history books and to read multiple books on the same topic so that I can form my own opinion vs only being exposed to an author’s (sometimes biased) views on history.
Same (although maybe not specifically focused on the Crusades for me). I love your RUclips handle, btw. I read a biography on Scipio Africanus for Historathon at the beginning of this year. I tend to gravitate towards history books in general, though, and to read multiple books on the same topic so that I can form my own opinion vs only being exposed to an author’s (sometimes biased) views on history.
I understand getting peeved at the bait-and-switch 'white man bad' indigenous stories--I forget what the book was, but it was from a popular series that even my parents had heard of that was supposed to be a fictional story based on how Native Americans lived back in the day...first chapter is full of the 'white man bad' and left a bad taste in my mouth for the rest of the book. Like if you're going to yell at us for wanting to learn about your culture but also yell at us for being indifferent to it, why would we put in the effort when we're hated either way? I do want to suggest for a Halloween reading Dragonfly by Fredric S. Durbin--I'm currently rereading it and it has some Christianity and praying in it so it's definitely not liberal. Also, One Second After by William R. Forstchen was a terrifying read since it's a 'what if' story based around an EMP burst going off; for a similar vibe but with a happier ending, Alas, Babylon by Pat Frank. Good luck with your book club! :D
I would recommend some more fiction, because of the way it influences the subconscious. Heinlein's Starship Troopers, CS Lewis's Chronicles of Narnia, and J.R.R. Tolkien's Lord of the Rings are some recommendations for starting points. There are also some authors in the indie and self-published spaces that have more recent offerings.
Before you even got to it, I was thinking The Screwtape Letters, but wasn't sure if this idea of yours included "religious" stuff. I was truly shocked when you mentioned it, as it came to my mind and then a minute later you mentioned it. It is a great book, but the writing is probably a bit more "formal" than what we are used to in this day and age. It reads like classic literature. But great book and message.
Great Book Club name, Hannie! I love your spirit and your unique ways of trying to raise our consciousness in the struggle against the "Woke Mind Virus" and a world flooded with so much historical misinformation, misrepresentations, and unexpected twists and turns. The first book IS in my library and I just put a hold on it. I'm first on the list. I am not sure I am going to be able to keep up because I tend not to have enough time to get through books quickly, for assorted reasons, but I will follow along as best I can, and I will have that first book before Christmas! Another book I have on HOLD at the library which you may or may not want to consider for the future is "Chaos: Charles Manson, the CIA, and the Secret History of the Sixties". Also you may like books by Gad Saad, like "The Parasitic Mind". I read that one and it was great. He has a new one out now. I also read one of Andrew Breitbart's books he released just before they bumped him off, and it was incredible to see how aware he was of the struggle playing out in our society a full decade or more than all of us who just woke up in recent years. But don't mind these ideas. I trust that you are picking good books on your own, and I am eager and interested to check them out. You rock, girl!
The Book of Strange New Things by Michel Faber; The Weight of Memory by Shawn Smucker; The Last Crusade: Spain 1936 by Warren Carroll; Cruel Logic by Brian Godawa; Fatherless; Childless; and Godless trilogy by Dr. James Dobson; plus any of Kenneth Robert's historical fiction. Just a few suggestions.
I'd love to see additions of maybe Hillbilly Elegy, any Thomas Sowell, Jordan Peterson, Milton Friedman, more CS Lewis, Ayn Rand, and I also saw someone mention Joe Abercrombie's The Blade Itself which I've been wanting to read!
Hey Hannie. I love your channel and what you’re doing. Recently found you through your “Goodreads white man hate” video and I’m wondering if you’d consider my anti-woke horror novel for a review, or even your book club? A Hot Dose of Hell is a harsh, action-packed, darkly comedic story which is both a race against time horror thriller and a vicious satire on woke leftists. I won’t info dump the full blurb on your comment section. But if you’d like to know more it can be found at Amazon and a bunch of other bookstores and there’s a few reviews from good people on RUclips as well. I hope you’ll check it out. No worries if it’s not your thing though. Keep up the great work 🫡
Are you familiar with Passage Publishing? They publish a lot of rightwing nonfiction, but they released a romance novel this year called Something of the Springtime that I’ve heard is actually good.
You're going to love The Screwtape Letters. CS Lewis really let his sense of humour out to play with it :) Also, as an idea (and at the risk of creating a monster), related to the book club, have you thought of letting conservative or even neutral but non-woke authors reach out to you just to build up a directory of books (both paper and digital) which don't push an agenda and might be interesting to your channel viewers ?
There's something to that subliminal conditioning of bookstores. I noticed years ago a trend where major bookstores will turn specific books to be cover-side out to draw more attention to them when you're looking through the shelves. Consistently these would always be the left leaning books. Like if you were in the biography section, all the books about historical figures to celebrities would be spine-side out, but then there'd always be a Michelle Obama or an AOC or some other left wing flavor of the month facing cover-side out. As for the book club, I just discovered your channel like 2 days ago, so I'm excited that I caught this in time. I probably won't participate in every book review but I'm interested in joining in. I'm curious if these will all be your picks only or will you be taking requests in the future?
Do you think you'll start a Goodreads group for this book club? :) It's a great way to organize discussion threads and the dates for when this or that book is read.
Have you read The Humans ,by Matt Haig I would really like your opinion Are you on Goodreads ? O know you're not crazy about it. But it wouold be nice to compare reads Screwtape letters is on audio on RUclips
'Conservatives' shouldn't be made to feel like they are trash. I'm not sure if the name is the greatest one! Also, at said book club, books from conservatives who are not necessarily maga should be considered, especially those from either side that advocate for 'America First' and for traditional values. Books from the Daily Wire, Libertarians or Neo-Cons should NOT be accepted.
I read nonfiction.. Any psychologist will tell you that reading too much fiction can make you delusional and out of touch with reality... Book club is a great idea.. May I suggest "Zen and the art of motorcycle maintenance" great book kinda' half and half non fiction..
tbh I doubt reputable psychologists are saying that. Fiction makes people more empathetic and creative, if anything. I also don't know what would constitute "too much fiction".
Men in my Situation are on Kindle unlimited, too. Count me in.
I’ll pin this!!
Let’s take publishing back💪
Yes, yes, yes. I have finally found a booktuber that is openly conservative!
Yes! This is awesome!
I ate breakfast at a local rural greasy spoon a couple years ago and a man was wearing a cardboard sign around his neck the size of a license plate with deplorable written on it. He fit right in....I watched 10 secs of your video and I said, "I'm in!" I subscribed and commented. America, Its the deplorables who jump out of helicopters, rush into burning buildings, keep the lights on and feed us.Thank you, you made my day...
I’ve read Tulsi’s Book 😊 i go back to it often. I don’t mind rereading it. I’m currently reading Melania’s autobiography (on hoopla) and RFKs book “The Real Anthony Fauci”
I just bought the real Anthony fauci!
Tulsi is a Putin puppet
That book is what made me a fan of RFKJ, and reinforced my belief that Fauci belongs in jail. And he didn't just write a bunch of words without backing it up. It must have at least a thousand references/citations.
@@klrbeech7054 yes, I’m still at the beginning but he provides so much information to very serious claims and backs it up with sources. Idk what’s going to happen with all of that but perhaps that’s why Fauci might be getting a “preemptive” pardon from Biden 😕
@@hannie76 nice!
I randomly stumbled upon your channel the other day like a man in a dry rocky landscape happening upon a rattlesnake. Yet, to my surprise, it was not a snake; it was a happy little bunny which I gladly picked up. I look forward to your online book club.
I hope there's a lot of Thomas Sowell in there!!!
There needs to be!
It should be divided into fiction and non-fiction.
We prefer fiction
Yes, I'm hoping to read Discrimination and Disparities by Sowell but also open to others too as I haven't read any yet (just finished college in a very liberal state and hadn't had much time to branch out)
Yes let’s do it
Conservatives have a huge victim complex
Patriotic booklovers, rise
Heck yeah
This is so cool! I've recently been getting back into books and don't really know where to start. This channel is a godsend!
I'm so sick and tired of Leftists.
I'm sick of conservative victimhood.... stop whining
@@bipslone8880 "hey i've been victimizing you and subverting your culture to plant roots of my own ideology into your children through mass indoctrination, but you noticing is really problematic for me so shut up and quit whining"
As someone who loves writing what is the best conservative fiction
Cormac McCarthy in his entirety. Not really conservative in it's content explicitly but McCarthy was a right wing dude who the media is trying to now slander with baseless accusations (The accuser says she recognized him from a author picture which does not exist) conveniently right after he's dead and can't defend himself. He's a bit out there but The Sunset Limited, The Road, No Country For Old Men, and The Border Trilogy are good starting points.
Christopher Ruocchio is making some amazing sci-fi with his Sun Eater series.
Dan Simmons isn't really "conservative" and is pretty much a bog standard libertarian but The Hyperion Cantos, The Terror (Amazing TV adaptation too), as well as Drood, Illium, and Endymion are incredible.
Also The Book Of The New Sun, one of the greatest series of novels ever made, rivals The Lord Of The Rings.
William F. Buckley’s Blackford Oakes spy thrillers, Robert Heinlein science fiction, and George Gillman’s Edge series of westerns are good places to start. Also Tom Clancy, Brad Thor and David Drake. Buckley and Gilman are out of print, but can be found on the internet.
And chainslaughter231 is right. Cormac McCarthy is fantastic.
Military fiction tends to be conservative.
@@chainslaughter231 I love Cormac McCarthy! Terrible to hear that he was accused of SA. I hope the truth comes out and hopefully his name can be cleared.
This sounds cool. I just finished the first draft of what I'm writing, so I'm definitely looking for something to read that's not my own work 🔥
The one you want to read is "The Conservative Mind" by Russell Kirk. However, an EXCELLENT primer for any high school or college age American is Kirk's "The Politics of Prudence". You cannot be an American Conservative without studying Russell Kirk.
Noted! I’m not high school or college aged, but I will look into the primer book
@@hannie76 I second "The Conservative Mind." It is required reading for anyone interested in understanding Anglosphere (paleo-)conservatism.
Another book I would recommend, both for itself as well as for its bibliography is Harold Bloom's "The Western Canon: The Books and the School of the Ages."
"People's Republic" by Kurt Schlichter. "Live Free or Die" by John Ringo. Alot of John Ringo books could be on a conservative fiction list. I used to love "The Last Centurion" by Ringo....but that was before Covid. Tom Kratmans'"Carrera" series is good for action and some philosophy as well.
I need to look into Larry Corria. He is a consertive/libratarian author that is one of the best in the world. (In my personal opinion.)
I will look into it
What about a Reactionary Book Club? Evola, Guenon, von Kuenhildt-Leddihn.
Some good books I’d recommend as a conservative:
Anything by Victor Davis Hanson. But “the Dying Citizen” is a must.
Joe Abercrombie’s “Blade itself series.” And the sequel trilogy “The Age of Madness”. It basically demonstrates the terror of mob rule and communist revolutionary uprisings in a fantasy setting.
Lonesome dove is a great book that gives an honest and brutal depiction of the cowboys and the Comanche war bands of the late 1800s.
Anything by Gad Saad.
Anything by Douglas Murray.
Gad Saad and Murray are not America First
This is such a good idea and I really hope it takes off for you and becomes something big, important and moving.
As a side note I used to read book series by a number of authors featuring the same characters over many books and noticed around 2020 all of the series started introducing “progressive” characters and plot lines that never existed before in a way that felt like these elements were always a part of the ongoing story line. Or, in some cases, inserting a progressive character that adds nothing to the story but keeps popping up. It felt, to me, these authors were told to do this. At this point I’ve given up on many authors I actually used to look forward to reading.
What you are doing is necessary and I hope makes a difference.
I think you, me, and excessive detail are the only conservative booktubers on here.
And conservative book society!!
@hannie76 yes! Can't forget them!
Glad to see Tulsi's memoir is on the list! I know Candace Owens has written one too called "Blackout: How Black America Can Make Its Second Escape from the Democrat Plantation"; I have it on my Kindle and am hoping to begin reading it soon but assuming I enjoy it as much as I expect, I wouldn't mind revisiting it for a later book club :)
I read that one for a blog!
My travel memoir ‘Take My Breath Far Away’ is the last of its kind- white author travels to Africa without apologizing for her race.
I love historical fiction (mostly Roman empire):
"I, Claudius" and "Claudius the God"
"The eagle in the snow" - the last days of the empire as seen through the eye of a young soldier. You feel like you were alive as the empire disintegrates.
Also...
"The Quaternary Vote: The Election of God's Successor" - God resigns and people have to elect the next king of the universe (very interesting premise, the author is well-read and an expert in many disciplines)
Right Wing Revolution by Charlie Kirk is a fantastic book for understanding conservative politics. Very easy to read as well, good for someone who doesn't read.
Lee Iacocca autobiography, a Titan of industry who had thoughts of higher office.... A Confederacy of Dunces as well
Due to all the liberal books that swarm the book shelves now adays I enjoy reading books about the middle ages and especially the Crusades.
Same (although maybe not specifically focused on the Crusades for me). I love your RUclips handle, btw. I read a biography on Scipio Africanus for Historathon at the beginning of this year.
I tend to gravitate towards history books and to read multiple books on the same topic so that I can form my own opinion vs only being exposed to an author’s (sometimes biased) views on history.
Same (although maybe not specifically focused on the Crusades for me). I love your RUclips handle, btw. I read a biography on Scipio Africanus for Historathon at the beginning of this year.
I tend to gravitate towards history books in general, though, and to read multiple books on the same topic so that I can form my own opinion vs only being exposed to an author’s (sometimes biased) views on history.
I just looked up the book and ordered it on interlibrary loan. It looks compelling!
yay!!
I understand getting peeved at the bait-and-switch 'white man bad' indigenous stories--I forget what the book was, but it was from a popular series that even my parents had heard of that was supposed to be a fictional story based on how Native Americans lived back in the day...first chapter is full of the 'white man bad' and left a bad taste in my mouth for the rest of the book. Like if you're going to yell at us for wanting to learn about your culture but also yell at us for being indifferent to it, why would we put in the effort when we're hated either way?
I do want to suggest for a Halloween reading Dragonfly by Fredric S. Durbin--I'm currently rereading it and it has some Christianity and praying in it so it's definitely not liberal. Also, One Second After by William R. Forstchen was a terrifying read since it's a 'what if' story based around an EMP burst going off; for a similar vibe but with a happier ending, Alas, Babylon by Pat Frank.
Good luck with your book club! :D
I would recommend some more fiction, because of the way it influences the subconscious. Heinlein's Starship Troopers, CS Lewis's Chronicles of Narnia, and J.R.R. Tolkien's Lord of the Rings are some recommendations for starting points. There are also some authors in the indie and self-published spaces that have more recent offerings.
I think 4/6 being fiction is a great start!!
Before you even got to it, I was thinking The Screwtape Letters, but wasn't sure if this idea of yours included "religious" stuff. I was truly shocked when you mentioned it, as it came to my mind and then a minute later you mentioned it. It is a great book, but the writing is probably a bit more "formal" than what we are used to in this day and age. It reads like classic literature. But great book and message.
Well I have a month to read it, so I’ll get used to the style!
@@hannie76 I think you'll enjoy the message he's trying to get across. I have enjoyed several books by C.S. Lewis.
Great Book Club name, Hannie! I love your spirit and your unique ways of trying to raise our consciousness in the struggle against the "Woke Mind Virus" and a world flooded with so much historical misinformation, misrepresentations, and unexpected twists and turns. The first book IS in my library and I just put a hold on it. I'm first on the list. I am not sure I am going to be able to keep up because I tend not to have enough time to get through books quickly, for assorted reasons, but I will follow along as best I can, and I will have that first book before Christmas! Another book I have on HOLD at the library which you may or may not want to consider for the future is "Chaos: Charles Manson, the CIA, and the Secret History of the Sixties". Also you may like books by Gad Saad, like "The Parasitic Mind". I read that one and it was great. He has a new one out now. I also read one of Andrew Breitbart's books he released just before they bumped him off, and it was incredible to see how aware he was of the struggle playing out in our society a full decade or more than all of us who just woke up in recent years. But don't mind these ideas. I trust that you are picking good books on your own, and I am eager and interested to check them out. You rock, girl!
The Book of Strange New Things by Michel Faber; The Weight of Memory by Shawn Smucker; The Last Crusade: Spain 1936 by Warren Carroll; Cruel Logic by Brian Godawa; Fatherless; Childless; and Godless trilogy by Dr. James Dobson; plus any of Kenneth Robert's historical fiction. Just a few suggestions.
BEST NAME EVER!!!
Nice work. Make sure you have a copy of Road To Serfdom.
I'll be here for Feb. Been wanting to read her book anyway
Good times!
Open borders inc by Michelle Malkin is a must read.
This is a great idea.
First book is on kindle unlimited.
I'd love to see additions of maybe Hillbilly Elegy, any Thomas Sowell, Jordan Peterson, Milton Friedman, more CS Lewis, Ayn Rand, and I also saw someone mention Joe Abercrombie's The Blade Itself which I've been wanting to read!
holy wow wow I am so interested
You had me at "C J Box"
Broward County Library still had the 1619 Project on their home page till recently 😮
I read Never Whistle at Night last year and promptly unhauled it... even though the cover is stunning..
My library has January’s book!
oh wow that's great!
Hey Hannie. I love your channel and what you’re doing. Recently found you through your “Goodreads white man hate” video and I’m wondering if you’d consider my anti-woke horror novel for a review, or even your book club?
A Hot Dose of Hell is a harsh, action-packed, darkly comedic story which is both a race against time horror thriller and a vicious satire on woke leftists. I won’t info dump the full blurb on your comment section. But if you’d like to know more it can be found at Amazon and a bunch of other bookstores and there’s a few reviews from good people on RUclips as well.
I hope you’ll check it out. No worries if it’s not your thing though. Keep up the great work 🫡
Needs some Arktos books.
Are you familiar with Passage Publishing? They publish a lot of rightwing nonfiction, but they released a romance novel this year called Something of the Springtime that I’ve heard is actually good.
You're going to love The Screwtape Letters. CS Lewis really let his sense of humour out to play with it :)
Also, as an idea (and at the risk of creating a monster), related to the book club, have you thought of letting conservative or even neutral but non-woke authors reach out to you just to build up a directory of books (both paper and digital) which don't push an agenda and might be interesting to your channel viewers ?
I always welcome people to reach out with books! Also, None of the fiction books on the list push an agenda
Another conservative gem.
Non-fiction: Hayek, Thomas Sowell, David Friedman
There's something to that subliminal conditioning of bookstores. I noticed years ago a trend where major bookstores will turn specific books to be cover-side out to draw more attention to them when you're looking through the shelves. Consistently these would always be the left leaning books. Like if you were in the biography section, all the books about historical figures to celebrities would be spine-side out, but then there'd always be a Michelle Obama or an AOC or some other left wing flavor of the month facing cover-side out.
As for the book club, I just discovered your channel like 2 days ago, so I'm excited that I caught this in time. I probably won't participate in every book review but I'm interested in joining in. I'm curious if these will all be your picks only or will you be taking requests in the future?
Do you think you'll start a Goodreads group for this book club? :) It's a great way to organize discussion threads and the dates for when this or that book is read.
I didn’t know that was a thing! Let me look into it!
Capitalism and Freedom by million friedman
I like this, but I'm into fantasy. Not nonfiction.
make sure you join in for June when we read a western fantasy!! It has Lovecraft elements
@hannie76 ooh! Sounds fun. What would be a good day to set a reminder?
If you really want to read some right wing literature, check out The Cultured Thug Handbook by Mike Maxwell
Have you read The Humans ,by Matt Haig I would really like your opinion
Are you on Goodreads ? O know you're not crazy about it. But it wouold be nice to compare reads
Screwtape letters is on audio on RUclips
'Conservatives' shouldn't be made to feel like they are trash. I'm not sure if the name is the greatest one! Also, at said book club, books from conservatives who are not necessarily maga should be considered, especially those from either side that advocate for 'America First' and for traditional values. Books from the Daily Wire, Libertarians or Neo-Cons should NOT be accepted.
Find another group, this one’s not for whiners like you.
OP is correct. No books from Daily Wire and their ilk, no Neo-Cons as well. Only America First people
This woman is FINE.
Relax bro
Don't simp
I read nonfiction.. Any psychologist will tell you that reading too much fiction can make you delusional and out of touch with reality... Book club is a great idea.. May I suggest "Zen and the art of motorcycle maintenance" great book kinda' half and half non fiction..
tbh I doubt reputable psychologists are saying that. Fiction makes people more empathetic and creative, if anything. I also don't know what would constitute "too much fiction".
the art of motorcycle maintenance lmao. I didn't know they made books for tiny dks. Do tiny dks read?
Yt plese stop recommending this krap.
commenting on videos only tells the algorithm you like it. hope this helps!