Small Government Book Fan Club discussion
Welcome and Questions


The novels are:
"The Ghosts of Hanoi" - the story of an investigation into a plot concerning the fate of the POW/MIAs in Vietnam and one man's quest to get to the bottom of it.
"Duly Constituted Authority" - the Joint Chiefs of Staff take on a radical president more concerned with political correctness and social engineering than combat effectiveness.
Both of these are available on www.Amazon.com for the kindle and www.smashwords.com for other formats. Just search on the title or my name, Alex Drinkwater, Jr.
Thanks!
Welcome Alex! Feel free to also post your links on the self-promo thread to hopefully get more attention. As you browse through this website, you'll see you're in good company as far as conservative self-pub authors go.

In my day job, I'm a political and business reporter for a U.S.-based news organization. I'm also a published author. My new book is The Chinese Banker, a piece of political fiction about a Chinese plot to ravage the U.S. economy. But I promise I won't use this group to try to sell my book. As my publisher can tell you, marketing isn't my strong suit. (Though I will post something about the book in the group's section for new books because I guess that's how you market yourself these days.)
I'm still finding my way around Goodreads, and looking for friends. I add almost any new friend, so if you are interested please send me a friend request.
Thanks,
Dustin


Hi! I'm Diane, and am interested in fiction which positively represents capitalism and small government. Of course, I read all kinds of things, but my fave authors are Gene Wolfe, Madeline L'Engle, C. S. Lewis, Tolkien, and in libertarian terms, Rand, F. Paul Wilson, J. Neil Schulman, Heinlein, Poul Anderson, and the Liaden novels of Steven Lee and Sharon Miller, a great SF space-opera writing team. I also love Dean Koontz.

I love Kay Nolte Smith!
Welcome to the group Diane! If you just joined, I wanted to let you know about our upcoming group read of Ayn Rand's Anthem. Also, check out our bookshelf and "book suggestions" threads; I'm sure you'll find lots of stuff to read that's capitalism/freedom friendly.

Welcome. I look forward to seeing what you've read that I've missed. :)
Hi! I'm Beth I mostly like historical fiction and history( especially WWII). Some of my favorite authors are Ayn Rand, J.R.R Tolkien, Mark Twain, and Tricia Goyer! I also really like the Huger Games, it actually reminds me a little of "Anthem" by Ayn Rand! :)

You mention you like WWII histories, I do to. I went through a period a few years ago where it was about all i read. Have you read Delivered from Evil: The Saga of World War II? It's one of my favorite single volume history covering the events of the world interspersed with "mini-biographies" of some of the prominent people.

I appreciate the suggestions. I have *Anthem* on hand, so I'll start it soon. Thanks also for the book suggestion lists.

Welcome. I look forward to seeing what you've read that I've missed. :)"
Start with *Alongside Night* and *The Rainbow Cadenza* by J. Neil Schulman. I think you'll all be pleasantly surprised.

Also you can learn more about my book and my ideas on my webpage at www.stoptheinsanitytarget2014.com
I'd love to hear what you think.
David
Welcome to the group David! I personally like to think of myself as a "libertarian with sanity" (a term I stole from former NYC mayor Ed Koch, who called himself a liberal with sanity), so I will certainly check out your website to compare notes. You may want to re-post both links in the self-promo thread, where they might get more attention.
Also I hope you will join us in the current group read of Anthem. I know Ayn Rand was sort of at war with libertarians, but in the end she should get credit for inspiring so many people in the movement.
Also I hope you will join us in the current group read of Anthem. I know Ayn Rand was sort of at war with libertarians, but in the end she should get credit for inspiring so many people in the movement.


There are some really exciting things going on with Liberty Island Media (mentioned last year when it was a startup) that will make it much, much easier for folks here to find good conservative/libertarian fiction. They are looking at becoming a curator of these books and stories as well as a producer of them. To that end, they're looking for reviewers (double-posted reviews are fine) and content providers, especially folks with already-published novels in this vein who are interested in creating a free LI author page to promote their work.
I've been - retained? Hired? something - as a senior editor, primarily in charge of finding and developing new writers. (They have other guys looking at media like music, video, and graphic novels.) Any help would be deeply appreciated. As soon as I figure out how to do it with this sudden new identity, I'll start a thread on this.
Meanwhile, I'm going to mine the excellent information y'all have compiled here so far. I would like to find a way to give back, if you've any suggestions. While you do accomplish more when you don't worry about who gets credit, I prefer to give credit to those who deserve it, and this forum certainly does.
Welcome Jamie! Your project sound really exciting. Feel free to browse this group and I'm sure you will find plenty of authors and ideas to use. The only thing I ask in return is more publicity for this group (if you could link us a couple of places, including on FB, that would be awesome). The more members and participation we get here, the more publicity we can provide other projects in return. It's all good.

Honestly it is a story that teaches close to 20 economic principles and us also fun for children to read. I published it almost 3 years ago now and have sold quite a few copies. Please check it out. Let me know what you think lol.
Sounds like something sorely needed today. Please post a link in Self-Promo thread so more people would see.
Welcome to the group!
Welcome to the group!


Historical fiction (Steven Pressfield et al), fantasy fiction (David Gemmell, Terry Goodkind et al), political (Jonah Goldberg recently) and books about the art of story telling (Larry Brooks, Robert Mckee, James Scott Bell).
I am a Reagan conservative. I'm looking to connect with conservatives who want to change the world via the arts such as writing, movies, music, blogging ...but focus mainly on the culture, not strictly politics.
Currently I'm writing a fantasy fiction saga. Six books are planned. My goal is to self publish the first one this year.

If you want to tell me your email address, I'm happy to send you a copy of Night Machines.
Also visit these sites where people are working to promote and establish a conservative counter-culture:
http://ConservativeFiction.com/
http://www.libertyislandmag.com/
Do you have a website so I can check out your work?
Kia
Welcome Allen!
Please visit our Self Promo thread to tell us more about your writing and post your links. Looking forward to your contributions to this group.
Please visit our Self Promo thread to tell us more about your writing and post your links. Looking forward to your contributions to this group.

Thanks for the reply. Here are two examples of my style. Both are action scenes. Both are segments of an unpublished saga. One was read in my writing group, a short "5 page" excerpt.
http://aspeakinghuman.wordpress.com/2...
Here's another. A longer scene...
http://aspeakinghuman.wordpress.com/2...
I will check out those sites. Thanks for the info.

For history, there are no better writers than William Manchester and David McCullough, but Nathaniel Philbrick is also quite good.
For a good laugh,Patrick McManus has few peers.
If you share similar book tastes, I welcome you to send me a Goodreads Friend request. I like to see what people with similar interests are reading.
Some in this group may think that Ayn Rand is the Queen of small government. I strongly disagree, so much so I wrote a book about it- Atlas Shrugged and Jesus Wept. I'll add my link to the self promo thread soon.
Don Milne
http://fiddlingant.blogspot.com/

Am a daily Beck listener, member of my local Tea party, Constitutional conservative with libertarian leanings. Small business owner and farmer, homeschooling parent of 3; which means my free time (what little there is of it) is spent reading or cleaning or canning food. (i'm female, btw)
Avidly read just about everything, but particularly like medical/science/nature although it has all been corrupted by junk science and the progressive machine.
just a warning, I tend not to use capitals, write incomplete sentences and then/than incorrectly. I apologize if this bothers you in advance.
Welcome Truff! Happy to have you here, even though you just made me feel completely inadequate. (I'm happy if there's enough frozen mac'n'cheese in my freezer to feed the kids LOL).

LOl! thanks
frozen mac and cheez is good!


I'm Tom Schroder, and new to Goodreads as well as this group. During my working life, I was one of the few conservative political science professors left in this country. It was a lonely place to be, and now that I am retired, I breathe easier. No longer is there a need to comment on the oftentimes distressing news of the day.
I am a voracious reader and am happy to have found this group. I enjoy reading history, fiction, philosophy, and political satire.
I am also the author of a novel, The Citadel, and will be posting on the self-promo page. I am looking into the procedure for a book giveaway and would like to offer it to this group. The book is political satire and intended to be a more modern and relevant 1984 and Brave New World.
Happy to be here!
Tom

I've been an active reader my entire life. My earliest memory is of my mother reading a book to me, although I can't remember which one it was. (I do remember the color of the bedspread, oddly enough.)
My favorite fictional genres are SF and fantasy, although I do take occasional spins through historical fiction and thrillers when the mood strikes. I also like a good swashbuckler now and then -- I really liked Sabatini's _Scaramouche_, for example. My non-fiction reading is usually in philosophy, economics, psychology and history.
I've been an Objectivist since I first encountered Ayn Rand back in 1987, although it took me well over a decade to really understand and internalize her ideas. Heinlein joined the mix a couple of years later.
Professionally I'm a software engineer. For the last year and a half I've been working for the Amazon subsidiary that makes the Kindle. I take great pleasure in the tremendous opportunities the e-book revolution has made possible for pro-freedom writers whose careers were formerly choked off by the left's Gramscian take-over of the traditional publishing industry.
This may be a bit off-topic since it's focused on non-fiction, but I'm also a regular participant in an online book discussion group that reads and chews on books by Objectivist intellectuals. We've got literally years of weekly episodes recorded and available for free download, covering books like _The Ominous Parallels_, _Objectivism: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand_, _The DIM Hypothesis_, _Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology_, _Ayn Rand's Normative Ethics: The Virtuous Egoist_, _Understanding Objectivism_ and _Explaining Postmodernism_. We've also taken a whack at the non-Objectivist but interesting _Tea Party Patriots: The Second American Revolution_ and a variety of shorter essays by Rand and others. I suspect our next book will be the national bestselling _Free Market Revolution: How Ayn Rand's Ideas Can End Big Government_.
If interested, the seminar's home page is at http://www.objectivismseminar.com.
Welcome Kyle! Looking forward to your contributions here, and this is one of the few places on GR that's not full of Amazon haters, so you're safe here:) I do think Kindle is the best thing that ever happened to independent writers, esp. those of small-government persuasion.
We do concentrate on fiction here because it seems there is a much bigger market for conservative/libertarian non-fiction, but fiction writers still have very hard time finding any support. Of course, when it comes to Rand's work, her fiction and non-fiction are intertwined, so it's good to discuss both at the same time. I find myself always telling people to read her essays/interviews to clarify some points she simply did not have space to elaborate on in her fiction (Atlas Shrugged is humongous, but it's still only one book LOL).
We do concentrate on fiction here because it seems there is a much bigger market for conservative/libertarian non-fiction, but fiction writers still have very hard time finding any support. Of course, when it comes to Rand's work, her fiction and non-fiction are intertwined, so it's good to discuss both at the same time. I find myself always telling people to read her essays/interviews to clarify some points she simply did not have space to elaborate on in her fiction (Atlas Shrugged is humongous, but it's still only one book LOL).

_Atlas Shrugged_ is huge, but I'm still amazed at how many people (even on the right) manage to miss so much of what it contains. It really isn't about politics except in a derivative sense.

http://newsbusters.org/blogs/ken-shep...
Books mentioned in this topic
How I Found Freedom in an Unfree World: A Handbook for Personal Liberty (other topics)Atlas Shrugged (other topics)
White Girl Bleed a Lot: The Return of Race Riots to America (other topics)
White Girl Bleed a Lot: The Return of Race Riots to America (other topics)
Delivered from Evil: The Saga of World War Two (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Colin Flaherty (other topics)Colin Flaherty (other topics)
Michael E. Newton (other topics)
I believe that's the case in some European countries. Camille Paglia wrote a column some years ago proposing just that and at the time I thought it was a great idea. Now I see it won't work because the activists will never give up until they own the language in full. That requires changing the definition of marriage, not just getting rights.