Packing InfernoThe Unmaking of a MarineTyler E. BoudreauPacking Inferno is the spectacularly written story of the ordeal of a Marine officer in battle and then coming home. It is the struggle with a society resistant to understand the true nature of war. It is the fight with combat stress and an exploration into the process of recovery. It is the search for conscience, family, and ultimately for one’s essential self. Here are the reflections of a man built by the Marine Corps, disassembled by war, and left with no guidance to rebuild himself. |
Porn & PongHow Grand Theft Auto, Tomb Raider, and Other Sexy Games Changed Our CultureDamon Brown
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Voluptuous PanicThe Erotic World of Weimar BerlinBy Mel GordonThis sourcebook of hundreds of rare visual delights from pre-Nazi, Cabaret-period “Babylon on the Spree” has the distinction of being praised both by scholars and avatars of contemporary culture, inspiring clubgoers, filmmakers, historians straight and gay, graphic designers, and musicians like the Dresden Dolls and Marilyn Manson. |
Secret Agent 666Aleister Crowley, British Intelligence and the OccultBy Richard B. SpenceThe founding father of modern occultism, the “Great Beast” Aleister Crowley, has been the subject of several biographies, some painting him as a misunderstood genius, others as a manipulative charlatan. None has looked seriously at his career as an agent of British Intelligence. Using intelligence documents from British, American, French, and Italian archives, Secret Agent 666 reveals that Crowley played a major role in the sinking of the Lusitania, a plot to overthrow the government of Spain, and the 1941 flight of Rudolf Hess. Verification of the Great Beast’s participation in the twentieth century’s most astounding government plots will likely blow the minds of history buffs and occult aficionados alike. |
SecessionHow Vermont and All the Other States Can Save Themselves from the EmpireBy Thomas H. Naylor; Introduction by Kirkpatrick SaleThis groundbreaking book reveals how a seemingly wild political idea continues to grow and create debate on our unsustainable, ungovernable and unfixable empire. “Secession may seem like an outlandish idea at first, but when considered forthrightly and un-prejudicially it becomes a powerful alternative to other kinds of political action. Thomas Naylor has here charted a brave and inspiring course for any American interested in practical, useful, thoroughgoing social and political change in America.” —Kirkpatrick Sale “Here’s the Tom Paine of the 21st century, and a surprisingly compelling argument for applying the small-is-beautiful philosophy to the United States itself.” —Jay Walljasper, Ode magazine |
Twilight of the MachinesBy John ZerzanThe mentor of the green anarchist and neo-primitive movements is back with his first book in six years, confronting civilization, mass society, modernity and technoculture. As Zerzan writes, “These dire times may yet reveal invigorating new vistas of thought and action. When everything is at stake, all must be confronted and superseded.” |
The Intimate Sex Lives of Famous PeopleRevised Editionby Irving Wallace, Amy Wallace, David Wallechinsky and Sylvia WallaceFor its initial edition in 1981, the legendary Wallace family read 1,500 biographies, pored over rare correspondence, legal transcripts and medical reports, and interviewed lovers, confidants and associates of many distinguished men and women in world history. This 600-page illicit encyclopedia of the private lives of writers, politicians, athletes, popes, rabble-rousers, composers, rock stars and sex symbols has been revised and enlarged, with a dozen new entries, including ones on Kurt Cobain, Malcolm X, Wilt Chamberlain, Ayn Rand, Jim Morrison, Nico, Aleister Crowley, and more. The Wallace family is known for The Book of Lists, The People’s Almanac and The Book of Predictions. |
The Secret KingThe Myth and Reality of Nazi Occultism
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Dark MissionThe Secret History of NASABy Richard C. Hoagland and Mike BaraFor most Americans, the word “NASA” suggests a squeaky-clean image of technological infallibility. Yet the truth is that NASA was born in a lie, and has concealed the truths about its occult origins. Dark Mission documents this seemingly wild assertion. |
Hollywood’s Hellfire ClubThe Misadventures of John Barrymore, W.C. Fields, Errol Flynn and “The Bundy Drive Boys”By Gregory William Mank
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