Easily my favourite rat bastard among many is Michael Malice (no relation).
On Episodes 11 and 16 [and, later, 27] of his chat show “YOUR WELCOME” (sic), Malice provided a list of variously his “favourite” books or books one ought to read.
(RSS [or just of those episodes].)
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Ron Chernow, Alexander Hamilton
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Not Robert Caro’s books on Lyndon Johnson, as suggested by a caller and summarily rejected
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“If you are right of centre, this is downright pornography”: Thatcher: The Downing Street Years (YouTubé)
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The Black Book of Communism: Crimes, Terror, Repression; Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar; Gulag: A History; Revolution 1989: The Fall of the Soviet Empire
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“I would say this trio are the redpill trio”:
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Within the Frederick Copleston nine-volume history of philosophy, Volume 7: The Germans (not its actual title); also From Luther to Hitler; Max Sterner, The Ego and Its Own (“you like his tone because it’s very fuck-you and, you know, just very fuck-everybody”).
“God, I have a lot of German books on this list. That’s interesting”
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“This is a must”: John Patrick Diggins, Mussolini and Fascism: The View from America
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Albert Camus, The Rebel and The Myth of Sisyphus (also his biography [“I’m blanking on the author”]): “how intensely he believed in doing the right thing no matter what the costs are”
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Auschwitz (mentioned on both episodes, complete with the same anecdote)
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Arthur D. Morse, While Six Million Died: A Chronicle of American Apathy
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The Illusion of Victory: The True Costs of War
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Tokyo Vice: “A lot of people I know who might or might not be on the spectrum just don’t like fiction. So a good nonfiction book reads like a novel. And this is one”
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Wrapped in Rainbows: The Life of Zora Neale Thurston (“A very admirable human being”): Her era “was when downtown whites – leftists – found black people interesting, and as soon as the Depression hit they threw them in the garbage. So it’s a fascinating look at that time”
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Intellectuals and Society by “the best conservative writer, in my view,” Thomas Sowell. (“Isn’t that a terrible cover?”)
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Mapplethorpe: A Biography “because at different points he’s super-racist.” “At the time, photography was not regarded as something that could be art. It was regarded as… I dunno”
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Reagan and Thatcher: The Difficult Relationship: “yet you never hear about Regan and Thatcher winning the Cold War and liberating half the world peacefully, which I would say may be the greatest achievement ever.” (Two citations of Thatcher, but none of Claire Berlinski on Thatcher)
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David Pietrusza, 1948
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Luc Santé, Low Life: Lures and Snares of Old New York: “he talks about all these people who, if conservatives had their way, wouldn’t even be mentioned at all”
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A Renegade History of the United States and A History of the American People (Paul Johnson)
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Mark Skousen, The Making of Modern Economics: The Lives and Ideas of the Great Thinkers
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Steven Goldberg, Why Men Rule: A Theory of Male Dominance
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Camille Paglia: “She doesn’t have any really accessible books. She’s a great, great talker” (but cf. her disco-classics list)
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The Tree of Gnosis: Gnostic Mythology from Early Christianity to Modern Nihilism
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Henry Mayer, All on Fire
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The Liberal Reformers (“and the second half is terrible”); not apparently the exact title
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Amy Borkowsky, Statements: “a ‘humour’ book – in form, it is ‘humorous.’ But as you read it, there is no humour there. It is perfectly humourless even though it is purporting to be a humour book”
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Denis Johnson, Jesus’ Son (“and this book is beautifully written”)
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Ayn Rand: “you have to read her books in order or you are going to be a very bad person” (Anthem, The Fountainhead, then Atlas Shrugged), all of which you can easily look up yourself
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Julian L. Simon, The Ultimate Resource 2 “goes through every environmental claim ever, using government data, and shows they’re all bullshit”
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(UPDATE) On Episode 27, Malice interviewed Edward Stringham, whose books Anarchy and the Law and Private Governance Malice also recommended
See also
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Harvey Pekar and illustrator Gary Dumm documented Malice’s early life in Ego & Hubris – itself now a collector’s item, though easily borrowed from the library.