What's some top tier masculine literature?

What's some top tier masculine literature?

Stuff like pic related, preferably with a philosophical or political slant.

Get out.

Check out some of Jack London's fiction. It may be up your alley.

I'm glad masculinity is dead because it makes it easier for me to manipulate people.

The Dwarf by Lagervist

>generation of men raised as complete faggots
>said faggots die lonely virgins or maybe have one kid with their overbearing feminist wife
>faggots replaced in their own countries with masculine foreigner immigrants

Sexual dimophism is crucial for reproduction, and as such asexuality get's killed out through a selection process. Saying masculinity is dead is just total ignorance.

They were the Mri--tall, secretive, bound by honor and the rigid dictates of their society. For aeons this golden-skinned, golden-eyed race had provided the universe mercenary soldiers of almost unimaginable ability. But now the Mri have faced an enemy unlike any other--an enemy whose only way of war is widespread destruction. These "humans" are mass fighters, creatures of the herd, and the Mri have been slaughtered like animals. Now, in the aftermath of war, the Mri face extinction. It will be up to three individuals to save whatever remains of this devastated race: a warrior--one of the last survivors of his kind; a priestess of this honorable people; and a lone human--a man sworn to aid the enemy of his own kind. Can they retrace the galaxy-wide path of this nomadic race back through millennia to reclaim the ancient world that first gave them life?

Now betrayed by the Emperor he once protected, master swordsman Saukendar leaves the way of the sword behind him forever--so he thinks. When a headstrong peasant girl burning to avenge her murdered family demands that he train her, Saukendar is faced with a momentous choice. Send Taizu away, never see her again--or join her and destroy the tyrant who has nearly destroyed them both.

A legend among sci-fi readers, C.J. Cherryh's Union-Alliance novels, while separate and complete in themselves, are part of a much larger tapestry-a future history spanning 5,000 years of human civilization.

Downbelow Station is the book that won Cherryh a Hugo Award for Best Novel in 1982. A blockbuster space opera of the rebellion between Earth and its far-flung colonies, it is a classic science fiction masterwork.

T H E H O L Y B I B L E

This is science fiction with a strong fantasy feel. Each book starts with the explanatory frame explanation, without which you couldn’t possibly guess at the wider situation. Briefly, the alien qhal discovered a gate on a moon by which they could travel instantly to other worlds. They built a system of gates and used them to travel not just in space but in time. Then someone went backwards in time and reality collapsed. Humans, who had been tangled by the qhal, discovered the gates and sent out a mission to close them and prevent reality collapsing further. Morgaine is the last survivor of this mission, and she’s grimly determined to keep on with it no matter what it takes.

Sure-handed Cherryh returns to the award-winning setting of Rimrunners and Cyteen , taking readers to the frontier where independent asteroid miners Morris Bird and Ben Pollard are struggling against the increasing economic domination of the bureaucratic Company. A mysterious distress signal leads them to a wrecked ship spinning out of control, with its sole remaining crew member, Dekker, crazy and near death. Bird and Ben haul him and his ship back to Base, enduring Dekker's mad ravings and debating the ethics of claiming the craft as salvage. Soon, however, the issue becomes far more complicated--Dekker's story suggests a murder and a Company cover-up, and the political crisis he sparks threatens to do more than deprive Bird and Ben of their salvage. Superbly rendered--with believable social, economic and political backdrops, complex characters, and a tense, well-paced plot--Cherryh's novel proves that high-tech science fiction need not sacrifice literary values.

That explains why a dumb shitfest such as Starship Troopers is popular - teenagers think it embodies masculinity (it's more the opposite)

SF veteran Cherryh's view of the future is unrelentingly cynical, and her protagonists are often ordinary people caught between corrupt corporations and self-serving politicians. In this sequel to Heavy Time , the heroes (and antiheroes) manage a few small victories, but the larger battle continues. All the major characters who survived Heavy Time are back, taking part in a top-secret test pilot program for the military. When Paul Dekker, probably the most trouble-prone character in SF, is seriously injured in a suspicious accident, his surly former partner Ben Pollard is called in as next of kin. While Ben investigates, rival military factions fight for control of the program, with the pilots caught in the middle. Cherryh, who evokes more tension and danger in one verbal confrontation than most writers can manage in a dozen space battles, maintains a fast pace throughout. Her abundant use of technoslang makes her prose style rather heavy going, but this excellent novel is well worth the effort.

This. Masculinity isn't dead, it is very much still alive in Asia and Africa. It only "died" in Europe, after the two genocidal great wars.

hey there guriffisu

Ernst Junger's works.

Jack London was mentioned earlier, seconding that.

The whole Warhammer 40k universe.

Conan.

this tbqhwy fampai

Thank me later

...

Anything by Robert E. Howard.

One hundred years of solitude

Das Boot

Yeah, Song of Songs and the Sermon on the Mount really get my testosterone pumping. Christianity has no gender you fools, under God there are no men or women.