The Turner DiariesThe Turner Diaries is a novel written in 1978 by William Pierce (under the pseudonym Andrew Macdonald), the late leader of the white separatist group National Alliance. Although The Turner Diaries was only available by mail order and at gatherings and gun shows, it is believed to have sold half a million copies, and to have had many more readers, because it was handed from one person to another. The novel is now available through mainstream sources (ISBN 1569800863) and online.
Plot
The narrative starts with an account set some time in the future, in which all people of non-European ancestry, as well those as of Jewish and Hispanic ancestry, have been killed. The bulk of the book then quotes a recently discovered diary of a man named Earl Turner, an active member of the white separatist underground who participated in these events. The book details a violent overthrow of the United States federal government by white separatists and also describes a brutal race war that takes place simultaneously. The story starts with the bombing of Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) headquarters, which many have suggested served as a model for the Oklahoma City bombing. The diary section ends with the protagonist flying an airplane equipped with an atomic bomb on a suicide mission to hit The Pentagon, which is depicted as a courageous and patriotic act. The novel ends with an afterword summarizing how white separatists later succeeded in conquering the rest of world and in eliminating all people of other races. The book is graphically violent. Non-whites are depicted as being sub-human. Whites who do not support the race war are described as "race traitors" who must be killed along with the non-whites. It is also posited by many (both within and without Pierce's Alliance) that the book represents a sequel to the later written book "Hunter", by the same author. A history of the revolutionary Organization is never fully provided in the Diaries, and it must have been a widespread assumption that it represented a hypothetical "next step" in the revolutionary evolution of the National Alliance. Hunter depicts the actions of a man, Oscar Yeager, in his quest to rid society of the perceived enemies of the White race. His actions eventually cultivate him a following, a small revolutionary cadre who it may be hypothesized represent early incarnations of the Order. Quotes from the book
(In the book "The Great One" refers to Adolf Hitler. Some white separatists argue that the "White world" actually only refers to the White Western World, not the whole world, but nothing in the text of the book supports this assertion.) Actions allegedly inspired by the bookTo date, a number of actions are alleged to have been inspired by the novel:
External links
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