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Top Ten Conservative Books
August 8,2006
| DesignerChick
Posted on 08/06/2006 6:22:21 PM PDT by DesignerChick
I was reviewing my libray and was wondering what the best, all time favorite, must have books I should get to complete my Conservative Collection. Here's what I've got: God & Man at Yale, All PJ O'Rourke Books (He converted me in 1996), Witness, First Things by Hadley Arkes (Must read for Pro-lifers!)
Any thoughts, Freepers?
TOPICS: Books/Literature
KEYWORDS: 10; booklist; booklists; books; conservative; readinglist; topten
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To: DesignerChick
"As a Man Thinketh" by James Allen.
It's not specifically conservative, but an excellent, and short, read.
To: DesignerChick
After the Fountainhead I don't know if I can do another Rand book.
Is it that good? I read The Fountainhead once. I've probably read Atlas Shrugged six times cover-to-cover, and looked at sections countless times. I quoted from it on Rush's show once regarding socialized medicine You have to remember that Rand wrote this in the 50s. She nails socialized medicine, and all sorts of government meddling. You'll love the "Equalization of Opportunity Bill," and the Anti-Dog-eat-dog bill!" Her villains are amazingly real.
ML/NJ
22
posted on
08/06/2006 6:37:57 PM PDT
by
ml/nj
To: Pietro
pages of inane polemics Maybe you could share with us one or two things that strike you as "inane polemics." (Please with emphasis on the word "inane.")
ML/NJ
23
posted on
08/06/2006 6:41:30 PM PDT
by
ml/nj
To: DesignerChick
24
posted on
08/06/2006 6:43:09 PM PDT
by
Copernicus
(A Constitutional Republic revolves around Sovereign Citizens, not citizens around government.)
To: DesignerChick
The Law-Fredric Bastiat
25
posted on
08/06/2006 6:49:30 PM PDT
by
nonliberal
(Graduate: Curtis E. LeMay School of International Relations)
To: MaryFromMichigan
The Way Things Ought to Be See I Told You SoThat was going to be my reply also. Any time I pick them up to move them or whatever, I can't resist tearing into a couple of chapters before putting them back down. It's a shame he hasn't done more.
To: DesignerChick
It's got a rabid cult following. I read through about 1/2 of it, and decided that the next time someone looked at someone else "mockingly", I was putting the book down. It took something like three pages.
I found the characters wooden and her philosophy heavy-handed and sophmoric.
That being said, there are people here on FR that absolutely love it. It would probably be good to get their viewpoint. I have basic disagreements with her philosophy of self-interest.
27
posted on
08/06/2006 6:50:47 PM PDT
by
Richard Kimball
(The most important thing is sincerity. Once you can fake that, everything else is easy.)
To: DesignerChick; All
To: DesignerChick
All of Thomas Sowell's work
All of Theodore Dalrymple's books
To: ml/nj

and Fountainhead... We the Living is also very good.
30
posted on
08/06/2006 6:56:28 PM PDT
by
Chode
(American Hedonist ©®)
To: DesignerChick
To: DesignerChick
I recommend Ann Coulter's books...I really liked Slander and Godless.
Laura Ingraham's book Shut Up & Sing was a really good book.
Also, with so much attention on our court system lately its book to look back at Robert Bork's book written after his USSC nomination called The Tempting of America.
To: DesignerChick
The Structure of Scientific Revolutions by Thomas S. Kuhn
33
posted on
08/06/2006 7:12:47 PM PDT
by
RFC_Gal
(It's not just a boulder; It's a rock! A ro-o-ock. The pioneers used to ride these babies for miles!)
To: DesignerChick
Others have already recommended "Free to Chose" by Milton Friedman (and I think his wife Rose is co-author), truly an excellent book.
Someone recommended "Mere Christianity" by C.S. Lewis, but that book is really what the title suggests. One of the best books I've ever read, and one of the very few I'm sure I'll read again, but it is a book about religion, not politics. And it is wonderfully titled, I'd like to think even lefty Christians would love it, but I may over-estimate them. Or maybe I just need to read it again.
More along the lines of what you are looking for I think is Lewis's "The Abolition of Man". A chilling, excellent, prescient book, very short. I never hear anything about it, but to me it is a book that everyone must read.
For fiction try Josephine Tey's 'The Daughter of Time', it's a good lesson on the staying power of historical lies.
34
posted on
08/06/2006 7:18:58 PM PDT
by
jocon307
(The Silent Majority - silent no longer)
To: DesignerChick
As to non-fiction, these are some of the best conservative books, even though not always by conservatives. We have truth and reason on our side, which sometimes makes even liberals and socialists our advocates based on their experience and reading of the evidence.
The Conservative Mind, by Russel Kirk.
Burke's Politics, which is an edited compilation of excerpts from Edmund Burke, or Reflections on The Revolution in France, Burke's single masterwork.
Modern Times, by Paul Johnson.
A Patriot's History of the United States, by Larry Schweikart.
Wealth and Poverty, George Gilder.
The Russian Revolution, Richard Pipes.
The Idea of History, R. G. Collingwood, for how to think about history.
Rationalism in Politics, Michael Oakeshott.
The Constitution of Liberty, F. A. von Hayek, and his path-breaking The Road to Serfdom.
Capitalism and Freedom, Milton Friedman.
Homage to Catalonia, George Orwell, an account of the Spanich Civil War.
The Gulag Archipelago, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn.
The Open Society and Its Enemies, Karl Popper.
The Abolition of Man, C. S. Lewis.
Revolt of the Masses, Jose Ortega y Gasset.
Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy, Joseph A. Schumpeter
The Great Terror, Robert Conquest.
The Quest for Community, Robert Nisbet.
Witness, Whittaker Chambers.
The Everlasting Man, G. K. Chesterton.
God & Man at Yale, William F. Buckley Jr.
Ethnic America, by Thomas Sowell, and almost anything else by him.
The Machiavellians, by James Burnham, and the Suicide of the West.
Witness, by Whittaker Chambers.
David Pryce-Jones, Faoud Ajoumi, Bernard Lewis, Bat Y'or, and Robert Spencer as to Islam and the Arabs.
Disraeli, Robert Blake, for a model political biography of a great conservative.
Martin Gilbert and William Manchester on Churchill.
Roll, Jordan, Roll, Eugene D. Genovese -- a great account of how American slaves suffered and triumphed over slavery.
The Second World War, John Keegan.
Battle Cry of Freedom (one volume), by James M. McPherson, or The Civil War, by Shelby Foote, for a multi-volume account of the central tragedy in American History.
Madison's Notes on the Federal Convention and the Federalist Papers for the indispensable source documents of the American Founding.
To: Oztrich Boy
36
posted on
08/06/2006 11:32:20 PM PDT
by
FreeRadical
(Just a Fool Waiting on the Wrong Block)
To: DesignerChick
Slouching Towards Gomorrah
by Robert H. Bork
37
posted on
08/07/2006 2:05:34 AM PDT
by
VRWCtaz
(A challenge to Liberals: I will read any book you name - if you will do the same. (very few takers))
To: DesignerChick
John Randolph Of Roanoke - Russell Kirk
Union And Liberty - John C. Calhoun
Arator - John Taylor
To: DesignerChick
Atlas Shrugged is a lot better; I've read both.
To: ml/nj
"Maybe you could share with us one or two things that strike you as "inane polemics." "
I'd be delighted
Howabout Rearden's speech to Dagny after their first night together (I paraphrase): "I hate you for the love I feel for you and I hate myself for the love you feel towards me but I'll use you whenever I want and despise you for letting me." etc. etc.
Or howabout every facial expression is composed of compound contradictory emotions ie joyful/remorse or painful/mirth; caused no doubt by the turgid dialouge these characters are made to pronounce such that even they, fictional characters, could hardly mouth them w/o ecstatic pain.
40
posted on
08/07/2006 7:08:59 AM PDT
by
Pietro
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