Recommended Writers

Peter Hitchens

Peter Hitchens

Peter Hitchens

Mail on Sunday columnist Peter Hitchens has written a number of excellent books charting the decline of Britain and the British way of life. His first book, published in 1999, was The Abolition of Britain, which was the start of a series examining the cultural, social and moral revolution which has transformed the country since 1950. His latest book, The Phoney Victory, challenges the many myths which have grown up around the Second World War. Mr Hitchens questions whether September 1939 was the right time to start the conflict, and indeed whether the fate of Poland was the right pretext.

Peter Hitchens’ Amazon page

Dr Jordan B Peterson

Dr Jordan Peterson

Dr Jordan Peterson

Clinical psychologist and philosopher Professor Jordan Peterson shot to national fame in his home country of Canada when he braved the wrath of academia and the forces of “woke” and spoke out against the appalling decision to write compelled speech into Canadian law. He nearly lost his job as a result but by then was becoming so well known and so highly regarded, his employers, the University of Toronto, had to back down. But arguably it was his fiery Channel 4 interview with journalist Cathy Newman which rocketed him to worldwide fame. Not many philosophers can claim celebrity status within their own lifetimes but it’s richly deserved. Jordan B Peterson must count as one of the greatest thinkers of our times and has proved a salvation to many people, especially rudderless young men, who have taken inspiration and comfort in his writings and YouTube lectures. His latest book is a sequel to his bestseller 12 Rules for Life - Beyond Order: 12 More Rules for Life.
Professor Jordan Peterson’s website

Patrick J Buchanan

Patrick J Buchanan

Patrick J Buchanan

Warning: Books by Pat Buchanan are not for the fainthearted! Mr Buchanan, a respected political commentator and broadcaster, and a former assistant to three US Presidents, writes despairingly but prophetically about the future of the United States. Perhaps his most important book, in light of the recent Presidential election debacle, is Suicide of a Superpower - Will America Survive to 2025? Written over a decade ago, his analysis and warnings have never been more prescient. Pat Buchanan points out that white Americans are hurtling towards minority status, with inevitable consequences both for them and the whole country. It’s a book of foreboding with little cause for optimism but well written by a clearly articulate and well-read man. Tied into the above theme, is his book The Death of the West - How Dying Populations and Immigrant Invasions Imperial Our Country and Civilization. Again, another desperately gloomy book - but one we in the increasingly fragile West ignore at our peril.

Patrick J Buchanan’s official website

Ed West

Ed West

Ed West

We have Ed West to thank for a masterful deconstruction of diversity and multiculturalism. His book, The Diversity Illusion, calmly and gently pierces the fog of propaganda to shine a cold, truthful light on the impact of mass immigration to Britain since the Second World War. With politeness and restraint, Ed West carefully shoots down the key claims made in defence of immigration such as the lie that Britain has “always been a nation of immigrants” and the other favourite, that the economy - especially the NHS - would collapse without it. Ed West is deputy editor of UnHerd - a website which aims to “push back against the herd mentality” and give a voice to opinions ignored by mainstream media.

Ed West’s Amazon page

Douglas Murray

Douglas Murray

Douglas Murray

Best-selling author and journalist Douglas Murray has recently published his latest book, The Madness of Crowds, which followed on from his internationally-acclaimed bestseller The Strange Death of Europe: Immigration, Identity, Islam. The Madness of Crowds is, appropriately enough, divided, chapter by chapter, between the Left’s sacred cows: Gay, Women, Race and Trans. Mr Murray carefully unpicks the contradictions, hypocrisy and stupidity of the “woke” movement within these categories. The Madness of Crowds was recently updated by the author with a new afterword. Mr Murray’s books are available on Amazon and can be reached via his website which includes a number of his press articles and videos.

Douglas Murray’s personal website

Melanie Phillips

Melanie Phillips

Melanie Phillips

Journalist, author and novelist, Melanie Phillips writes a weekly paid-for column for The Times of London. She also regularly writes articles for her website and recently launched a new website (see below) for followers of her work to subscribe to. Melanie Phillips has proved fearless in her determination to take on Islamic extremism and some years ago published Londonistan - a hugely worrying portrait of our capital city becoming the epicentre for radical Muslims. A shrewd and accomplished writer, who has also turned her hand to fiction (which many writers more used to penning non-fiction struggle to do). Her book The Legacy, has garnered a string of five-star reviews on Amazon.

Melanie Phillips’s new website at Substack
Her Amazon page giving details of her books


 

Sir Roger Scruton

Sir Roger Scruton Photo by Pete Helme

Sir Roger Scruton
Photo by Pete Helme

Conservative philosopher and writer Sir Roger Scruton very sadly died in January 2020. But he leaves behind him works of lasting importance - in particular in the field of what one might call cultural conservatism. Sir Roger had much to say on the concept of “beauty” and how important it is to our quality of life. Among his most important works is the classic How To Be A Conservative, which presents the case for modern conservatism. He writes that the book is “not about what we have lost, but about what we have retained and how to hold on to it.” One of his later books has been described as a “devastating critique of New Left thinking”. In Fools, Frauds and Firebrands, Sir Roger works his way through the chief proponents of left-wing thought from the 1960s to the present day: Hobsbawm, E P Thompson, Galbraith, Dworkin, Sartre and the notorious French philosopher Michel Foucault. At the RCM, the inspiration for many of our ideas and beliefs came through reading Sir Roger’s works and the insights we derived from them.

Sir Roger Scruton’s website

Ian Smith

Ian Smith, GCLM ID

Ian Smith, GCLM ID

Rhodesia was known as the bread basket of Africa. Its education and health care systems were the envy of the continent - for black people as well as white. Yet when majority rule came, high expectations turned quickly to bitter disappointment. The outcome was a disaster - white farmers were forced off their land, many were murdered and famine quickly stalked a land descending into chaos, violence and hyper-inflation. No-one can tell the sorry tale better than the former Rhodesian Prime Minister and RAF war hero, the late Ian Smith. His acclaimed book Bitter Harvest: The Great Betrayal is long out of print and difficult to obtain even second-hand, but a Kindle e-book version is available on Amazon for £3.99 (December 2020).

Buy Bitter Harvest, by Ian Smith, from Amazon

In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.
— George Orwell
[People] are hungry for a discussion of the relationship between responsibility and meaning and we haven’t had that discussion in our culture for fifty years. We’ve concentrated on rights and privileges.
— Professor Jordan B Peterson

George Orwell

George Orwell (photo by NUJ)

George Orwell
(photo by NUJ)

The great George Orwell needs no introduction, nor do his seminal works 1984 and Animal Farm, which warned of a dystopian future should society ever adopt a Soviet-style system in pursuit egalitarianism.

Yet we should not overlook Orwell’s other writing since there is much material there of ongoing value. Firstly, there are his other novels. He didn’t publish many but they are well worth reading - in part because they are beautifully and vividly written but also because they give an insight into Orwell’s take on the world. A fine novel which not so many people read these days is Keep The Aspidistra Flying. It’s a powerful denunciation of the materialism on which modern society is based - while at the same time noting, ironically, that in order to escape its clutches, one nonetheless needed money.

George Orwell was a regular columnist for news magazines such as The Tribune and also penned numerous essays casting a shrewd and acerbic eye over unfolding political events in the 1930s and 40s. Arguably his finest work is The Road To Wigan Pier which is in two distinct halves. The first describes in remarkably lucid and eloquent terms, working class suffering in the industrial north of England. His account of going down a mine and the experience of taking board and lodgings in a nearby slum house must count as among the finest of their kind in the English language.

Orwell considered himself a socialist and fought on the side of the Republicans in the Spanish Civil War. Yet there was much in him for conservatives also to admire. These days, he is claimed by both the Left and the Right and arguably belongs in different ways, to both sides. It’s not our job to give the Labour Party advice but if they wished to find a way to win back the droves of working-class people who abandoned them under Jeremy Corbyn, they would do well to reflect on the type of socialist Orwell was and the deep love he felt for his country which these days most call the Yookay but which to him was simply, England.

George Orwell’s Amazon page