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<title>I read &#x26;#x27;The Camp of the Saints.&#x26;#x27; Here&#x26;#x27;s why it&#x26;#x27;s relevant</title>
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<description>Jean Raspail&#x26;#x2019;s The Camp of the Saints (1973) is easily one of the most suppressed books of the 20th century. That&#x26;#x2019;s because it&#x26;#x2019;s a dystopian novel about mass third-world migration, a topic still considered taboo to many. While The Handmaid&#x26;#x2019;s Tale and Nineteen Eighty-Four have become regular headliners of &#x26;#x201C;banned book&#x26;#x201D; campaigns and subjects of novel studies in school curriculums, English translations of Raspail&#x26;#x2019;s magnum opus have been so hard to find that used hard copies sold for prices ranging into the hundreds. Until just last year, that is. In 2025, the indie heterodox translator-publisher Vauban Books came out with...</description>
<author>National Post</author>
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<pubDate>Tue, 28 Apr 2026 20:46:40 GMT</pubDate>
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