History books which I have enjoyed:
A complete, detailed account of the history of the white race. Examines the history of nearly all European countries, and explores the history of the Indo-Europeans, their expansion into India, and west Asia, it also covers the existence of white societies in the ancient middle-east and Egypt.
The history of the Northmen, or Northern Germanic peoples. Explores Nordic mythology, and its origins in reality, showing the evidence for the existence of men such as Odin as real figures. The book details all of the voyages of the Northmen and the places they conquered.
A good book detailing the mythologies of various cultures throughout the world. Contains some very good chapters on Arthurian, Hellenic and Germanic mythology.
A controversial study of the history of the Jews in Europe, and the modern day state of Israel. The book analyses the Talmud and various other Jewish rabbinical sources, showing the hostile nature they hold in relation to non-Jews (Gentiles), and revealing that many of these anti-Gentile religious laws are the source of human rights abuses in modern day Israel.
Stephen Mitford Goodson explains the origins of Central Banking, its development through history, and how it came to be the dominant monetary authority in modern society.
A very good book about the history of the Zulu nation in South Africa, from its origins during the southwards Bantu migration to its collapse at the hands of the British empire during the 1879 Anglo-Zulu war. It provides a comprehensive history of both the Zulu empire and the Anglo-Zulu war, it also details extensively the landscape of Southern Africa prior to the arrival of the Bantu and how the Zulus came to be the most prominent tribe within the region. Very long read but good nonetheless.
This book tells of the rise of Occultism in Weimar Germany during the aftermath of the First World War, exploring the origins of the Ariosophical movement pioneered by Guido Von List and Jorg Lanz Von Liebenfels, and demonstrating the influence that they had on certain aspects of the NSDAP such as Heinrich Himmler. As well as explaining the fundamentals of Ariosophy, the book also provides a historical account of the various Right-Wing Occult socieities in Germany during the interwar period such as the Order of New Templars, the Germanorden and the Thule Society. As well as providing a history of these groups, it is ironically a decent introduction to Ariosophy.
A collection of sources pertaining to the mythological beliefs of the inhabitants of the British isles, draws mostly from later Christian sources like Geoffrey of Monmouth, and contains origin stories of the Britons, Scots, Albions, Irish and Anglo-Saxons as well as many other mythical tales such as that of the Arthurian cycle amongst others. Interestingly, many of the myths attempt to draw a line of the descent between the Anglo-Celtic kings and the descendeds of Noah.
A history of the Indo-European people, otherwise known as the Aryans, covering their migrations throughout Europe, the Steppe, the middle-east and Northern India. The text demonstrates the Indo-European presence in these regions through a number of factors, including: Linguistic similarities between European and Indo-Aryan languages, discoveries of similair archaelogical finds, evidence of similair cultural practices and racial-skeletal types. The text also examines all of the proposals for the location of Indo-European origin, with the author concluding the Northern European hypothesis to be the most likely.