>>608359
I read the Grimnoir trilogy, which was almost decent but books 2&3 were annoying with how hard Correia was using the chosen girl character. I would never touch that trilogy again, but I would read a new one in the same universe.
I read the first MHI much later and it was complete dogshit, one of the worst books I've ever laid eyes on. It's ridiculously bad.
>>608536
>>608537
You're right to disregard it. The jewish religion(s) influenced history, but it still doesn't rival the likes of the Aryan Zoroastrianism. You can easily spot a jew lover and/or midwit by his mentioning of jewish influence while making no reference to the Zoroastrians. Zoroaster is the first to speak of both Heaven & Hell, the first to implement the rigorous prayer schedule which has kept Islam alive to this day, honestly the first to speak of modern religion as I know it. Since this is a book thread, Boyce's introductory text to Zoroastrianism is what I've read about it, along with some of the Avesta and other scattered writings. I'd consider basic knowledge of Zoroastrianism (and others) to be required reading for a Western male in the modern day, lest everyone starts believing the ((("chosen people"))), largely due to irresponsible and/or jew-loving authors like that guy.
For the thread I'd recommend:
Fireforce(RLI memoirs)
Unknown Soldiers (Famous semi-fiction book written about the Finnish continuation war by a soldier of the same conflict)
Dupuy's Encyclopedia of Military history is serving me well for referencing things.
I'm reading Robertson's biography of Stonewall Jackson right now, it's very good, even exceptional.
Anybody read Che's stuff? Worth the time?