What’s the first book you read as an adult and what you thought of it?Me? Mein Kampf, Stalag Edition.It gives another perspective to one of the world’s most misunderstood men as a primary source. It also dramatically increased my vocabulary as one who was new to literature. I don’t hate anyone, and am called to love my enemies.
>>25286437> check out my cool poem> i read mein kampfy chair by uncle adi. no, i wont tell you what i thought about it> im not underageb&
>>25286437Reading about Hitler is a waste of time. He's just a boomer meme. I don't care if he's misunderstood. He's irrelevant. He killed a bunch of people and then himself. End of story.
>>25287732It was nearly a decade ago. I don’t remember much of it. One thing, however, if I recall correctly, is that I was impressed by his ability to write long sentences such as not using a full stop for a page if I’m not mistaken, which I tried and occasionally now try to imitate.
>>25287744True. The sooner we can get over Hitler and Nazism in general the sooner we can get over the holocaust and the sooner genocidal kikes can stop playing the victim. The jews' greatest fear are these words: "Adolf who? The holo-what?"
>>25286437First fiction as an adult was All You Need Is Kill. It was okay. First nonfiction was The Generalissimo: Chiang Kai-shek and the Struggle for Modern China. It was fantastic and made me into a Chiang simp for a few years.
>>25288255>being a simp for Cash My-Checkshiggy
>>25288287Vinegar Joe propaganda
>>25288303Who’s Vinegar Joe?
>>25286437In college one of my assignments was to read a controversial book and defend its inclusion in a school library collectionFrom the list of titles I picked this YA fantasy slop, it was a slog to get through