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Looking for a revolution type novel

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26 replies to this topic

#1
tokin'

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Title says it all, I'm looking for a book about an oppressed minority taking over a tyrannical majority. If you've read George Orwell's "1984" I'm looking for something similar but with a happy ending lol. Any help would be greatly appreciated :)

#2
Shipwreck

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Read Animal Farm.

#3
Pale Blue Dot

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Homage to Catalonia

also by Orwell

no happy ending though; Francisco Franco won the Spanish Civil War, so .... yeah

Also it's non-fiction

Edited by Pale Blue Dot, 04 May 2012 - 04:01 AM.


#4
Sam_Spade

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First one that came to mind was Twelve Days by Victor Sebestyen.

If you're pursuing this as some kind of mana to fuel an ideological standpoint -- you might also want to consider reading about some of the greatest suppressions and revolutionary failings.

#5
TheAtmansPath

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Guerrilla Warfare - Che Guevara

More of a handbook, it seems. I haven't read it but it is certainly a revolution type book.

Whether you idolize or loathe Ernesto Che Guevara, it is undeniable that his revolutionary spirit and idealism are almost without comparison in history. This book provides a glimpse into Che's thoughts and plans for the future after the succesful otherthrow of the dictator Fulgencio Batista by Castro's Cuban revolutionaries.

Most of the book itself (123 pages of it) is an actual handbook on how to conduct guerilla warfare in an environment like the Sierra Maestra mountains. This part of the book is interesting for its brief explanations of how to make tank traps, molotov cocktails, and for its exploration of guerrila tactics, all discussed in a clearly didactic style. There are multiple instances in this part of the book where Che explicitly outlines the conditions that are absolutely necessary for successful guerilla warfare. However, it is his own neglect of these basic conditions that led to his eventual capture and execution in Bolivia (this is obviously not in the book). I personally, found Che's exploration of the guerilla fighter's psyche and motivations more interesting than the dated fighting tactics.

The book also contains two of Che's essays where he reveals his internationalism and calls upon the replication of revolution based on Cuba's example. In his "Message to the Tricontinental", he famously calls for the creation of "many Vietnams". These essays give the reader a sense of Che's long-standing antipathy towards the United States and other imperialistic regimes.

If you believe that armed struggle via guerilla warfare is the primary means for revolution, then you need to read this book (and find a jungle to carry out your revolution). If you don't believe that the "staccato singing of machine guns" will be able to bring down imperialist regimes, then this book may upset you or intrigue you for its irrelevance. Either way, it is a glimpse into the mind of a truly quixotic revolutionary.



#6
Sam_Spade

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Guerrilla Warfare - Che Guevara

More of a handbook, it seems. I haven't read it but it is certainly a revolution type book.


I quite like the book.

Most of Che's work is no longer applicable, but it's a piece of history, it's well-written and argues largely for compassion.

This reminds me; my old copy was lost to a particularly bad book-lendee. I need to get a new copy.

#7
TheAtmansPath

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A brave new world - Aldous Huxley

Brave New World is an excellent book and, what's more, one that seems to be becoming more relevant all the time in our fast paced world. And unlike many other books with a similar philosophical orientation, Brave New World is quite refreshing, as Huxley's prose is somehow manages to be clear, elegant and insightful without being overly obvious.
As regards the actual plot, Brave New World is in essence a portrayal of a utopia (or dystopia, depending how you look at it) in which there is constant prosperity, people are always content, as they are well provided for and have been programmed to like their society in all respects. This programming is undertaken by workers in charge of breeding the future citizens of this idyllic world, which is united under one government, under Ford. As everybody has been programmed to like their class and job, everybody is constantly content and has no wish to do anything other than what is required of them. If they happen to become depressed, of course, there is always the mood altering drug Soma.

Through presenting a few individuals who do not exactly fit into this molded world, however, Huxley presents us with a challenging and endlessly interesting question: What can possibly be wrong with a world in which everybody is happy, even if there is no real free will involved in actuality? If we can make ourselves superficially content and never have to suffer a moment of desperation or uncertainty, why not just do that? With the help of William Shakespeare and a young man from a "savage reservation," Huxley explores the alternatives to his invented society's promotion of mindless satisfaction. Should true art and the deep thought and emotion that inspires it be sacrificed to perpetual happiness without thought or deeper feeling? Or is the attempt to find these deeper meanings just silly and self-defeating, as we will all meet the same fate in the end?

In this era of quick entertainment, instant gratification and materialism unbounded, there are no better questions to be asking than these, the ones at the heart of Brave New World. Pick up a copy and start to read - in addition to being quite interesting as a science-fiction book or portrayal of a future world, Brave New World is a book that inspires a lot of thinking about our lives today.



#8
Mikayote

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"The Moon is a Harsh Mistress" by Robert Heinlein. It's about a prison colony on the moon that's throwing off earth rule. It's also got just about the best description I've ever read for setting up a cell based resistance network.

#9
sky dog

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I recommended it in another thread, but it definitely applies here too

Posted Image

They said it couldn’t happen here. Then they said one man couldn’t stop it! Richard Wentworth spent his vigilante career as The Spider always in the shadows. Now evil acted in broad daylight. The Party of Justice swept into office, rewriting the laws of New York state overnight to benefit their criminal backers and make slaves of its people. This American Reichstag gave itself sweeping powers and raised a private army to exert its malevolent will. How could The Spider hope to stop a criminal conspiracy as big as the state itself? This time The Master of Men would go beyond taking the lives of evildoers… by bringing Hope to the tyrannized citizens of the Empire State! The “Black Police Trilogy” is author Norvell Page’s classic pulp fiction Nazi allegory from 1938. Originally published in three consecutive months of The Spider Magazine, the novels are collected in book form for the first time!



#10
tokin'

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"The Moon is a Harsh Mistress" by Robert Heinlein. It's about a prison colony on the moon that's throwing off earth rule. It's also got just about the best description I've ever read for setting up a cell based resistance network.


Sounds very intriguing..

I recommended it in another thread, but it definitely applies here too

Posted Image


Exactly what I'm looking for thanks man. I'll look into it when I'm done reading my current books:smoke:
I'm sure I'll be reading a lot more of Orwells books as well.
Thanks blades.

#11
Sunshine86

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"The Moon is a Harsh Mistress" by Robert Heinlein. It's about a prison colony on the moon that's throwing off earth rule. It's also got just about the best description I've ever read for setting up a cell based resistance network.


I was going to make precisely the same recommendation, cobber. Ayn Rand's Anthem is good also (and short—I read it in three days)—it doesn't address revolution in the traditional sense (deposing an oppressive regime) but does focus on individual freedom.

Edited by Sunshine86, 14 May 2012 - 03:07 PM.


#12
walterbishop

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Read the Hunger Games Trilogy. Easy reading, but with some pretty deep themes that reflect today's modern society.

#13
Sam_Spade

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Read the Hunger Games Trilogy. Easy reading, but with some pretty deep themes that reflect today's modern society.


Reading this post was the intellectual equivalent of stepping on a piece of lego hidden in a shag carpet.

#14
ClamChowder

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#15
walterbishop

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Reading this post was the intellectual equivalent of stepping on a piece of lego hidden in a shag carpet.


Coincidently, I was just thinking your post was the internet equivalent of you admitting you have a small penis and need to belittle others to make it seen bigger. Good luck with that, I suggest measuring from the top. ;)

#16
Sam_Spade

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Coincidently, I was just thinking your post was the internet equivalent of you admitting you have a small penis and need to belittle others to make it seen bigger. Good luck with that, I suggest measuring from the top. ;)


Oh lordy, sig'd!

#17
walterbishop

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That's not exactly the consequences of criticizing a book. You were criticizing a person.

But you spin it any way that makes your epeen feel bulkier.

#18
Sam_Spade

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That's not exactly the consequences of criticizing a book. You were criticizing a person.

But you spin it any way that makes your epeen feel bulkier.


I'll fix it.

I didn't mean to offend your sensitive disposition, I normally do not equate a single reading choice with an individual's identity - I suppose I forgot that some people do.

Addendum -- what is with your infatuation with the penis analogy? It's really going over my head, I think.

#19
M369

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Please leave the arguments out of this thread. If you wish to continue then take it to private messaging. Just please don't ruin a thread with off topic bickering.

#20
IamToasted

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1984,Animal Farm,and The Communist Manifesto




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