Immagine dell'autore.

William L. Pierce (1933–2002)

Autore di The Turner Diaries: A Novel

5 opere 403 membri 16 recensioni 1 preferito

Sull'Autore

Opere di William L. Pierce

The Turner Diaries: A Novel (1978) 359 copie
Hunter (1989) 37 copie
Who We Are (2012) 5 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Altri nomi
Macdonald, Andrew
Data di nascita
1933-09-11
Data di morte
2002-07-23
Sesso
male
Nazionalità
USA
Luogo di nascita
Atlanta, Georgia, USA
Luogo di morte
Mill Point, West Virginia, USA
Attività lavorative
white supremacist
Organizzazioni
National Alliance
Breve biografia
William Luther Pierce III (September 11, 1933 – July 23, 2002) was an American neo-Nazi, white supremacist, and far-right political activist. For more than 30 years, he was one of the highest-profile individuals of the white nationalist movement. A physicist by profession, he was author of the novels The Turner Diaries and Hunter under the pen name Andrew Macdonald. The former has inspired multiple hate crimes including the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing. Pierce founded the white nationalist National Alliance, an organization which he led for almost 30 years.

Utenti

Recensioni

Fantasia zero: a tutto viene attribuito il nome dal compito che svolgono nella storia come "L'Organizzazione", "Il Sistema" eccetera.
Pieno di razzismo e rancore.
Banale tentativo di sotto trama romantica che così scontata manco i film per ragazzine.
Un pieno e completo fallimento.
E poi NOIOSO NOIOSO NOIOSO, al punto che mi sono chiesto diverse volte durante la lettura se lo pseudonimo nascondesse un ragazzino di 13 anni "ribellino". E invece no, questo letame è opera di un adulto.
Quasi peggio del Mein Kampf, ma ad essere onesti il livello è più o meno lo stesso come d'altronde per i confusi contenuti.
… (altro)
 
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AsdMinghe | 15 altre recensioni | Jun 4, 2023 |
For my birthday I received a copy of The Turner Diaries, normally I would put a link in but any link I put in would get old quite quickly. While I had certainly heard of the book before I had never even seen a copy. So I was interested in finding out exactly what this book was about.

The conceit of the book is that 100 years after The Great Revolution a diary is found that was written by an ordinary member of the Organisation called Earl Turner. Everything is written from his point of view, with the exception of some notes to explain things, mostly for a future audience, not us. It begins in 1991 and goes until 1993, but it is not a day by day account. Dramatically I understand why the book has proven so popular. It is easy to read and always logical, it covers a great deal of ground, different types of action and locations. It shows you what is happening and gets the reader into the story. It is also technical, so if your interested in weapons or 'how would that work' questions then that is there. Just enough but never too much. Things constantly happen so it's hard to get bored at any point. Earl Turner is also an interesting character, both an everyman that most men can relate too and a heroic character. One forced by circumstances to go from everyman to hero. In the beginning Turner finds it hard to believe that he is capable of killing, by the end he kills countless people. While I won't spoil the story, I think it fair to say that the book and the violence within the book escalates by quite a bit.

So why is this book so controversial?

The book also escalates it's racial violence, at the start Whites need protection from the government. But the Organisation isn't Pro-White, it's anti-everybody who isn't White. Their ideology is at times anti-Black, at others anti-Jewish and at others anti-Liberal. Each is criticised multiple times throughout, but not at the same time. Each is treated as a separate issue. Just as the White traitors are always treated as a symptom of the disease and not as a cause, even though they are the ultimate cause of the problems. I was going to write that the killing of non-Whites was extreme, but actually the killing of Whites by the Organisation is also extreme. Turner and the Organisation are fanatics and killing people comes to mean nothing to them. Everything becomes about ends not means and killing anyone regardless of race or guilt to achieve those ends is justified in the book. Of course most people who dismiss this book simply call it racist, but it's not just non-Whites who die in droves.

As a story it's a good action story, it never lets up, something is always happening or about to happen. But this book is also about ideology, and a book that kills all non-Whites and a good deal of Whites is not a book on how to achieve our aims but one that shows us how things should not be done!
… (altro)
½
 
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bookmarkaussie | 15 altre recensioni | Jun 9, 2021 |
If this is truly the 'bible of the racist right' as was claimed in the book's preface, it certainly deserves it. If there are still ideological racists clinging to this thing, it's (unsurprisingly) out of a misplaced sense of tradition, bad taste in literature, or both. I could imagine some pleasure being derived from the often pornographic descriptions of violence, but beyond some musings about guerrilla warfare, after reading this I wasn't surprised that only a few pages describing bomb-making were found among Timothy McVeigh's belongings after the Oklahoma City Bombing. Perhaps he, too, realized that the bulk of this book is a paper-thin marriage of ideology, strategy, and story?

There are a few rare moments when it manages to be entertaining, and only in spite of itself At one point Turner, the author's rather dumpy but dedicated Mary Sue, reflects on the fact that he 'couldn't imagine himself calmly butchering a teenaged White girl' before his induction into the all-powerful Organization, but he'd 'become much more realistic about life recently'. Pierce's style of journal entries, combined with his pale prose, allows him to constantly proselytize to the reader with embarrassingly blunt statements like this, and it grows tiresome long before we've reached the infamous bombings this book is known for.

As an ideological piece, this book offers a somewhat interesting look into a certain kind of radical racist mindset, though I feel like there are less poorly written ways, both in literature and academic analysis, to read that. As literature goes, this falls among the lowest grade of fanfiction, and while it's clear that the story element is pretty low among the author's priorities it's not clear that he understood how tedious it is to read about dilemmas which are resolved almost entirely by your enemies having inherent racial shortcomings and your protagonists designed as clever, all-knowing superheroes.

… (altro)
1 vota
Segnalato
2dgirlsrule | 15 altre recensioni | Jul 12, 2020 |
Would have been 4-stars, but it is pretty (i.e. very) poorly written. However, as others have written, is a slightly disturbingly good guilty pleasure, a simple book of the white side in a near-future race war.

Some of it is just great because none of us are ever going to be allowed to hear such ideas ever again.

Good: easy to read, banned, very different
Bad: poorly written.
 
Segnalato
GirlMeetsTractor | 15 altre recensioni | Mar 22, 2020 |

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Statistiche

Opere
5
Utenti
403
Popolarità
#60,270
Voto
½ 2.5
Recensioni
16
ISBN
22
Lingue
2
Preferito da
1

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