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View Full Version : What's the most nigger-loving book you've ever read?



Out of Detroit
09-05-2010, 05:36 AM
For me it would have to be Iggy's House, a children's book written by libtard Judy Blume. Looking back at it now, it was just "we're all the same" BS being pushed off onto children. And it was written in the early 70s.

In the book, the woman circulating a petition to get rid of the negroes who just moved in is portrayed as a busybody whose husband is pussywhipped.

I have to say I did enjoy the book as a child, but now, 25 years later, I look back and realize, wow, what a load of crap!

shovelheadroad
09-05-2010, 06:34 AM
I was forced to read "Cry the beloved country" a novel about South Africa in high school. It was anti-apartheid propagana and was a primer for indoctrination into the libtard niggerlove kum-bay-ya mentality.

Avoid The 'Groids
09-05-2010, 07:05 AM
Less than a year ago I read "The Spook Who Sat By The Door". My ideas have changed since then.

unchained
09-05-2010, 07:10 AM
:think Paris Trout rates in the top few for me.I usually wont read anything with a nigger theme.Another book I read and was disapointed in was The Sound and the Fury,while not an outright nigger loving book it detailed the total decay of a once prominent southern family.I guess at one time it was very hip to tear down the" stereo typical southern family".I guess Faulkner was punishing the family of a Confederate General by fictionally destroying them.Grisham seems to be a nigger lover from the few books of his I have read.

Ibenohambone
09-05-2010, 07:12 AM
The "watermelon man"...about a white guy who turns into a nigger somehow.:lol

Murde. R. Monkey
09-05-2010, 09:46 PM
i'm with Brewski on this one. To kill a mockingbird. It really got me to thinking about something. The lawyer sure seems to love his pet nigger and I was wondering if there were really humans like that back in those times. There may have been but if any human did love niggers like that back then, I bet he was in the closet about it.

ANH
09-06-2010, 01:25 PM
"Bl#ck Like Me" by John Howard Griffin. I read this POS when I was 13 and I was just flat out astounded that any white man would be so consumed by nigger worship that he'd actually try to pass himself off as one. I think this niggerlover was certifiably insane. Then again, I think anyone that worships monkeys has serious mental issues.

00SLUG
09-06-2010, 07:30 PM
To Kill a Mockingbird was a load of nigger loving false reality.

Out of Detroit
09-06-2010, 08:42 PM
I would see "To Kill a Mockingbird" as complete fantasy. I think the whole point of it is, despite the evidence that the nigger didn't do it, he was convicted anyway BECAUSE he was a nigger. I would agree that if you can't prove he did it, you let him go.

But, in that story, that would require said nigger to be a magic nigger. What nigger would turn down the chance to muh dik a white woman? And the coalburner wannabe was coming on to him.

I also noticed that the book was published in the mid-1960s, when the uncivil rights thing was starting to heat up. So the timing of that kinda makes you wonder.

superiorwhitelady
09-06-2010, 11:46 PM
I'm with the "To Kill A Mockingbird" crowd.

KaffirSmasher
09-07-2010, 02:43 AM
Things are a bit fuzzy for me about that book. I never even bothered seriously reading it when it was required reading for one of my classes (even back when I wasn't in fullblown anti-nigger mode, I thought something was very wrong with that book).

Isn't that the book where the white girl actually assaults the buck by knocking him down off his ladder, and we're supposed to believe that he's perfectly innocent and sexually indifferent about it by the end of the book?

ANH
09-09-2010, 09:50 PM
As far as "To Kill a Mockingbird" goes I've got a personal beef with it. In tenth grade I had a batshit crazy english teacher that assigned it to me as an oral book report and then when I tried to talk about the rape she went nuts and said I couldn't talk about such filth in her class so I told her to go fuck herself and got bounced. :lol

LeeroyJenkem
09-09-2010, 10:18 PM
Probably "King Rat" by China Miéville. It's about a nigger who discovers he is part rat and that the pied piper of Hamlyn is out to get him. I suspect Miéville may have been extremely high when he wrote this one. It's probably tied with the section in "Iron Council" that is effectively a half the book long acid trip written in present tense for the most whacked out shit he has written. His work is a bit hit and miss but definitely brave. His latest is amazing.

Pillowlover34
09-12-2010, 04:56 PM
Before I even opened this thread, "To Kill a Mockingbird" came to mind. It was required reading in a high school English class. That book must have made a lot of nigger lovers, because it was written so convincingly as to make the reader really empathize with the nigger's lawyer. If I recall, there actually was some evidence presented in the form of physical damage on the white woman's skin, though this was explained away as coming from a different source.

Because the other students in that class fooled around, and I simply wanted to finish unpleasant assignments such as this one, I found myself ahead. Unlike any other teacher, this one actually punished me for that, requiring me to read "Roots," a romanticized, 600-plus page book about a nigger's ancestry. (By then, I had been gathering evidence that the teacher was a coal burner.) It was only after much pleading and parental involvement that the teacher dropped the demand that I write a report on that book.

Pillowlover34
09-17-2010, 07:01 PM
"The Cay". All about a 12 year old white boy whose family gets thrown overboard in 1942 while heading back to mainland US from the Caribbean I think.

I, too, was forced to read that fairy tale. At least there, however, the whole subject was quite exotic. Books about normal people set in familiar places are much more a threat to civility.

Justin Igger
09-17-2010, 07:09 PM
I remember this one was in my stack of books as a kid, not sure where it came from:

The cay


Grade 5-8–This is a classic novel about racism and a young man's realization that skin color does not matter. Phillip is an 11-year-old living in the West Indies at the start of World War II. He's excited at the idea of being in the war but is taken away by his mother who only wants to return to the safety of Virginia. Their ship is sunk by the Germans, and Phillip and his mother end up on separate life rafts. After being hit on the head with a beam from the sinking ship, Phillip awakens to find himself alone with Timothy, an old black ship hand, and Stew Cat, the ship's tomcat. The three survive on a raft for several days, during which time Phillip loses his eyesight due to the head injury. They eventually come ashore on a small unpopulated island. Phillip must learn to deal with his blindness and overcome his dislike for Timothy. Phillip's question, "Timothy, are you still black?," shows that Phillip has moved past the barrier of color. After Timothy's death, Phillip continues to live on the island and is eventually rescued and reunited with his parents.

At the end of the book the nigger straps itself and the kid to a tree to weather a storm and the nigger dies with his body bearing the brunt of the onslaught saving the kid.

Pure niggerloving bullshit. :tlb

Exterminanegros
09-22-2010, 08:46 AM
To Kill a Mockingbird has to be what I would have to define as the Uncle Tom's Cabin of the 20th century. It influenced and brainwashed many humans into thinking that niggers were humans.

S.T.P
09-22-2010, 01:49 PM
I had to read Malcolm X. Pure nigger Islam hate YT bull shit. When the class was over I took that shit book to the range and blasted it to bits from all 100 rounds of my Calico M-100.
A fitting end.

Mudflaps
09-22-2010, 02:04 PM
Like most everyone I was forced to read To Kill A Mockingbird in High school. I think I was a sophmore but knew even back they the BS of this book. I think I saw the movie in black and white with Cary I love niggers Grant.

Rigor mortis
09-22-2010, 08:44 PM
I had to read The Cay in the seventh grade and had completely forgotten about that book until I read about it now. To Kill a Mockingbird is another one, of course. It was such a shame when we were assigned to read it in high school. Until then, I thought my teacher was the most intelligent one I'd ever had and he was also very young and attractive. He turned out to be a total nigger-lover though, unfortunately. He went on about this book as if it's the bible.

I had to read a book for my anthropology class last year called "Ordinary Affects" by some self-hating coalburner named Kathleen Stewart. It is the most disgusting and horribly-written book I have ever been forced to read, and I actually dropped my major because of it. The author has a little nigglet and worships niggers, and all she does is bash white people and make niggers seem like they're saints. She describes staying at a nigger run hotel and calls it "paradise". The whole entire book is about her complaining that White people are all evil and racist. She doesn't even know how to write, and it was completely irrelevant for our course in the first place. The nigger lover who assigned it is the worst prof I've had in my life.

Out of Detroit
09-25-2010, 10:56 AM
Like most everyone I was forced to read To Kill A Mockingbird in High school. I think I was a sophmore but knew even back they the BS of this book. I think I saw the movie in black and white with Cary I love niggers Grant.

Don't you mean Gregory Peck?

I saw it too. Entertaining if you don't mind fantasy (i.e., magic nigger).

Had enought
09-25-2010, 06:23 PM
I was forced to read that mockingbird shit also as a kid and of course we had to do a big book report about it. That report was about 50% of the grade for that semester, so I guess the liberal teachers wanted us to read that garbage.

We also had to read the george washington carver super nigger peanut book. it was supposed to be a true biography, but as time went on I found out there was more bullshit in it than a farmers pasture!


:coffee

Black Plague
09-26-2010, 04:06 AM
The mockingbird bullshit. The teacher even made us watch the movie after we read the book as if that wasn't enough propoganda by itself. Good thing for cliff notes... i didn't actually read itthumbsup

Out of Detroit
09-27-2010, 12:47 PM
Oh, the Cliff's Notes for "Mockingbird"--it's worse than the book! The commentary makes out like protecting Southern white womanhood was a hate crime!