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Thread ID: 6864 | Posts: 8 | Started: 2003-05-23
2003-05-23 01:55 | User Profile
I've become aware of an online novel, files in .doc format, called The Hill of the Ravens. It depicts "White flight" to the Pacific Northwest followed by an independence/secession movement there against the Feds. Some pretty good action and intrigue. The secessionists succeed and you get a glimpse of the pro-White society that follows there.
Interestingly, there's visible religious tensions in the new Northwest American Republic between Pentecostals, Christian Identity adherents, Odinists, and National Socialists...who'da thunk?
Link here: [url=http://www4.vip.net/oarc/T/THOR.htm]http://www4.vip.net/oarc/T/THOR.htm[/url]
2003-06-02 03:24 | User Profile
I'm familiar with Harold Covington, the author of "The Hill of the Ravens", via the internet grapevine. Judging by the few pages I read, he writes well. And we certainly need more pro-white novels like his and Ward Kendall's well-received "Hold Back This Day", which came out about a year or so ago. I do have a question though - is "The Hill of the Ravens" to be published in book form?
Tom
2003-06-02 03:31 | User Profile
Originally posted by Tom Rennick@Jun 1 2003, 23:24 ** I'm familiar with Harold Covington, the author of "The Hill of the Ravens", via the internet grapevine. Judging by the few pages I read, he writes well. And we certainly need more pro-white novels like his and Ward Kendall's well-received "Hold Back This Day", which came out about a year or so ago. I do have a question though - is "The Hill of the Ravens" to be published in book form?
Tom **
From what I've heard via various e-lists, eventually, yes. It'll be self-published, of course, since no publishing houses would dare publish material of his that's that overtly racially oriented.
2003-06-02 23:31 | User Profile
If such an even were to occur, I doubt that the Pacific Northwest (Washington and Oregon) would be a launching pad or a nucleus of any sort. Seattle is probably the most liberal city in America, and simmilar things cna be said about certain locations in Oregon. Perhaps Idaho and Montana are better bets.
2003-06-03 06:50 | User Profile
Originally posted by Prodigal Son@Jun 2 2003, 18:31 ** Perhaps Idaho and Montana are better bets. **
They are both land-locked. Wouldn't having a coastal port be a necessity?
2003-06-03 17:30 | User Profile
Covington may become a decent fiction writer, but he badly needs an editor. He must learn to eliminate dialogue which doesn't advance the plot -- not that [u]Hill of the Ravens[/u] has much of a plot. [u]The Turner Diaries[/u] was a much better read, IMO.
Still, the book showcased Covington's ideas for a folk-state, and that was interesting.
2003-06-03 22:18 | User Profile
Looks interesting, I've downloaded it and will read it when I have some time. Putting my personal opinions of Covington aside, I can admit that from other essays of his that I have, he is a at least decent writer.
2003-06-03 22:42 | User Profile
Originally posted by Texas Dissident@Jun 3 2003, 00:50 ** > Originally posted by Prodigal Son@Jun 2 2003, 18:31 ** Perhaps Idaho and Montana are better bets. **
They are both land-locked. Wouldn't having a coastal port be a necessity? **
Well, if the giant ZOG-destroying tsunami comes, we'll have waterfront in Idaho! :D :punk: