Posted on 04/13/2012 3:36:38 PM PDT by Travis McGee
On Wed, Apr 11, 2012 at 9:58 AM, J.M. Berger wrote:
Dear Mr. Bracken,
My name is J.M. Berger. Im a journalist working on a story about the EFAD trilogy for the Daily Beast. I was wondering if youd have a few minutes to discuss the book between Thursday and Sunday via phone or email. (My deadline is Monday and I am out of the office most of today.)
I can be reached at this address or at 202-656-XXXX any time starting tomorrow morning.
Best,
J.M.
On Thu, 4/12/12, Matt Bracken wrote:
From: Matt Bracken
Subject: Re: Media query, #EFAD
To: J.M. Berger
Date: Thursday, April 12, 2012, 8:10 AM
Sure, I can do that. Its now 8am Thursday and Ill be off the grid until later this afternoon, but we can set up a call for anytime after that.
Matt
On Thu, Apr 12, 2012 at 8:13 AM, J.M. Berger wrote:
Any time this afternoon or after is fine with me. Just let me know, or just call when its convenient.
Thanks very much,
JM
On Thu, 4/12/12, Matt Bracken wrote:
From: Matt Bracken Subject: Re: Media query, #EFADTo: J.M. Berger
Date: Thursday, April 12, 2012, 8:48 AM
If you would prefer, we can use written Q&A format. Or, you could shoot me some questions that I could consider prior to a phone interview. In any case, Ill be out of range until later this afternoon.
Matt
On Thu, Apr 12, 2012 at 8:58 AM, J.M. Berger wrote:
Im mainly interested in understanding the role you see the book playing for the Patriot movement (entertainment or educational or inspirational, etc.), and how the book reflects (or doesnt) your own political views.
Id also like to talk about the inevitable comparison to The Turner Diaries. I didnt think the comparison was inevitable after Book One, but its difficult to avoid by the end of Book Three. Im interested in what you think of Turner, whether you set out intentionally to modify or improve on what it represents, and what role you think racial politics play in the modern Patriot movement.
JM
On Thu, 4/12/12, Matt Bracken wrote:
From: Matt Bracken Subject: Re: Media query, #EFADTo: J.M. Berger
Date: Thursday, April 12, 2012, 9:20 AM
Did you actually read all three novels? Every page? Im probably going to punt on this interview if your point is to compare my work to the racist screed the Turner Diaries.
Assuming you will say that you did read all three novels, Im guessing you are comparing FEAT to TTD based on bad actions by black characters in and around Memphis. Do you honestly think that after major earthquakes cut off W. TN (no water, no power etc), folks will all join across racial lines to sing kumbaya? There would be no racial element? Such a plot would be laughably unrealistic and PC. And do you find the murderously evil white vigilantes in FEAT to be portrayed sympathetically? Another Turner Diaries? Really? And did you miss the catharsis in racial feelings by Jenny?
I mean, seriously, did you read the damn novel, or skim it, or possibly just read the excerpts on my website?
If you have not read, (I mean, really read), all three novels, then forget it. Get back to me when you have.
And in any case, forget a phone interview. I can see already how that would go, when your notes become written words in your essay. Been there, done that, still got the scars, pal. Submit written Q&A only is how this will go, if it goes at all. My trust-o-meter is pegging the redline. My trust in journalists after a few decades dealing with them is below used car salesmen and hookers. Ive given interviews, and seen my words turned via the magical process of notes into damnable lies. Fool me once, etc.
Matt
On Thu, Apr 12, 2012 at 9:45 AM, J.M. Berger wrote:
I read all three novels. These are the reasons I think its valid to compare and contrast:
1) Both books are predicated around revolution/resistance tied to the seizure of guns,
2) The Memphis section of the third book clearly echoes the content of the Turner Diaries. My opinion about the credibility of anything you described is entirely irrelevant to that point unless youre arguing from a belief that black cannibalism is a realistically inevitable outcome of the breakdown of society or an unavoidable literary imperative of some kind.
3) Nevertheless, you seem to be approaching racial content in a markedly different way than Pierce. This is also a valid point for comparison and contrast, which is not the same as saying the two books are equal or equivalent.
4) Since you asked, my view is that the breakthrough that Jenny experiences is an awfully weak counterweight against the Memphis stuff. I plan on acknowledging its presence, and the other factors you included as counterweights, but I think its appropriate to discuss it in context. The balance in Book 3 is clearly much different from Book 1.
I can understand your wanting to clearly distinguish your book from Turner, but I frankly dont understand your outrage over the comparison. I think its pretty obvious and valid why one would discuss these two books together. To acknowledge the commonalities is not to equate the books on the basis of racial politics, writing or anything else.
So for some actual questions. Ill start with these, and if youre still willing to continue, I will send more.
1) Did you set out to do a political book in the form of a novel, or did you set out to write a novel that simply has political elements?
2) Did you consciously set out to write something that would be a non-racist or at least less racial alternative to The Turner Diaries as a text for the Patriot movement?
3) Would you describe yourself as part of the Patriot movement or as part of some other political wave?
4) Do you feel that the Patriot movement has historically had a racist component? Do you think it needs to change in this respect? If so, why?
Thanks for considering this request.
JM
From: Matt Bracken
To: J.M. Berger
Sent: Thursday, April 12, 2012 9:57 PM
Subject: Re: Media query, #EFAD
Mr Berger,
Let me take your approach for just a moment.
When did you stop beating your wife and children in drunken rages? Since we know that most journalists are drunken louts who beat their wives and kids, right?
Truthfully, most of the self-described journalists I have dealt with personally have been smarmy, lying SOBs, and I see you are typical of the breed.
AMF.
I sure hope so! Every word I type, I am ready to discuss anywhere, anytime. Here, in my novels, anywhere.
But I’m increasingly thinking the Daily Beast dangle was a ruse. On his Intelwire website, Berger says his next book is about the evil white racist militias, and the brave feds who risk all to infiltrate them.
I think the Daily Beast dangle was just to get me on the record, for his own nonfiction book project. Since Jihad Joe was such a dud (even with friendly reviews by the likes of the NYT) he is probably hoping a switch from muslim to domestic terrorism will give his sales a boost, and get his face on ABCNNBCBS.
That’s what I figured.
Berger says his next book is about the evil white racist militias, and the brave feds who risk all to infiltrate them.I can see it all now. Stereotypes like cookie-cutter characters. I'm sure one of the brave feds is a women who had to fight for the right to have the feds pay for her $9 birth control prescription.
You know those racists, they also have time to conduct their War On Women.
And every gun-owner a drunken wife-beater, I'm sure.
I agree about his summary. And it puts the “immaculate conception” of Barrack Obama into stark relief.
He is literally the “Rosemary’s Baby” born of two great evil totalitarian systems, temporarily allied while they agree to destroy freedom and liberty, in order to later impose their own hellish “utopias” on us all.
It must have been truly agonizing for him to read the Trilogy.
Ping.
That would be me. I resemble that remark!
This thread is worth skimming, esp. the Patrick McGoohan/Prisoner connection finally revealed in the 150s.
I used to make some pretty good change in Memphis on Saturday afternoons, sitting under the statue of W.C. Handy on Beale in front of [big surprise here] Handy Park, and gratefully accepting donations from tourists to pick my banjo.
Instead of singing while I picked my banjo.
Well done.
I don’t think there is a TV network that he would not be thrilled to appear on.
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