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A wonderful new issue of The White People's Quarterly is now available, spotlighting the importance of White spirituality. Essays, fiction, poetry, art, reviews, interviews, in-depth journalism, and even crossword puzzles, with cover art by the great Charlie Chisholm. Read more about it here:
www.whitepeoplepress.com/product/the-white-peoples-quarterly-vol-2-no-1/
www.whitepeoplepress.com/product/the-white-peoples-quarterly-vol-2-no-1/
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Back in stock: 50 Classic Tales: The Western Folk and Fairy Tale Tradition.
- 384 pages
- 300+ illustrations
- Aesop’s Fables
- Early Italian folktales
- The Brothers Grimm
- The tales of the British Isles
- Hans Christian Andersen
- Norwegian Folktales
A consummate collection to help both children and adults understand and connect with the folklore of the West.
Read more here:
https://www.whitepeoplepress.com/product/50-classic-tales/
- 384 pages
- 300+ illustrations
- Aesop’s Fables
- Early Italian folktales
- The Brothers Grimm
- The tales of the British Isles
- Hans Christian Andersen
- Norwegian Folktales
A consummate collection to help both children and adults understand and connect with the folklore of the West.
Read more here:
https://www.whitepeoplepress.com/product/50-classic-tales/
Whitepeoplepress
50 Classic Tales: The Western Folk and Fairy Tale Tradition
Buy this book on Amazon. 50 Classic Tales: The Western Folk and Fairy Tale Tradition is a fully illustrated hardcover book that will help both children and adults gain a greater appreciation for and understanding of the West’s rich history of folklore and…
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Remastered illustration by Honor C. Appleton from the story "The Red Shoes" by Hans Christian Andersen.
"The Red Shoes" is one of many examples of why alien, anti-white fairy tale gatekeepers like Jack Zipes and Maria Tatar are far more terrified of him than even the Grimm Brothers, who are largely responsible for igniting German nationalism.
"The Red Shoes" is about a girl named Karen, who covets a pair of red shoes and tricks her poor-sighted caretaker into buying them for her. Her obsession with the shoes causes her to become selfish and neglectful, wearing them immodestly to church, where an old, one-legged soldier puts a spell on them -- "'Never come off when you dance,' he told the shoes, tapping them with his cane." One night, instead of looking after her dying caretaker, Karen goes out dancing, but when she gets tired and wants to stop, the shoes won't let her. She just keeps dancing and dancing and dancing, night and day, across the land through woods and fields, and then back to town, where she sees the funeral being held for her caretaker, whom she left to die so she could go dancing. Karen then dances to the house of the executioner and begs him to chop off her feet. The executioner abides, the red shoes dance off with her feet inside, and he makes her a pair of wooden stump-legs. She attends church and faces the churchgoers, who saw her red shoes as gaudy and provocative for the occasion, now walking on wooden legs. Karen repents, recognizes that vanity led her astray, and accepts her fate.
Andersen can drive a type of anti-modern morality so deep into the mind of a child that they will simply never forget it. It is powerful, and even if the overt Christian element is not appealing, Andersen's stories should be mandatory reading for every White child.
"The Red Shoes" is one of many examples of why alien, anti-white fairy tale gatekeepers like Jack Zipes and Maria Tatar are far more terrified of him than even the Grimm Brothers, who are largely responsible for igniting German nationalism.
"The Red Shoes" is about a girl named Karen, who covets a pair of red shoes and tricks her poor-sighted caretaker into buying them for her. Her obsession with the shoes causes her to become selfish and neglectful, wearing them immodestly to church, where an old, one-legged soldier puts a spell on them -- "'Never come off when you dance,' he told the shoes, tapping them with his cane." One night, instead of looking after her dying caretaker, Karen goes out dancing, but when she gets tired and wants to stop, the shoes won't let her. She just keeps dancing and dancing and dancing, night and day, across the land through woods and fields, and then back to town, where she sees the funeral being held for her caretaker, whom she left to die so she could go dancing. Karen then dances to the house of the executioner and begs him to chop off her feet. The executioner abides, the red shoes dance off with her feet inside, and he makes her a pair of wooden stump-legs. She attends church and faces the churchgoers, who saw her red shoes as gaudy and provocative for the occasion, now walking on wooden legs. Karen repents, recognizes that vanity led her astray, and accepts her fate.
Andersen can drive a type of anti-modern morality so deep into the mind of a child that they will simply never forget it. It is powerful, and even if the overt Christian element is not appealing, Andersen's stories should be mandatory reading for every White child.
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Where is the hell is the setting that makes A look like B?
If you write a minimum five-sentence review of one of our books on Goodreads or Amazon we will send you a copy of 50 Classic Tales. (*Addendum: if you live in the United States.)
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Shrink-wrapped, too!
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"Kill all white people."
We have an important and exciting new book coming this summer: Myths and Legends of Western Nations. This collection will be an essential aid in helping both children and adults understand Western mythology. Look out for it!