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PRESENTING: FREN-Z MAGAZINE ISSUE #8
THE HALLOWEEN SPECIAL II

For the first time ever, we have released two issues of FREN-Z in as many months. We worked on Issues #7 and #8 at the same time, but the release of Issue #8 still represents a massive effort on the part of our team to meet this holiday deadline.

We'll post every page here. You can also read the PDF online and/or download it.

>Archive.org (Full Size)
https://archive.org/details/fren-z-magazine-issue-8

>Catbox (Compressed)
https://files.catbox.moe/5xzt79.pdf

Remember, these are all just stories, goys and ghouls! In real life, pure unadulterated WHITE POWER will protect you from the supernatural, so long as you believe.

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>>604
Thank you! It's perfect as is, we'll make good use of it. Excellent work!
Replies: >>612
I had no idea the latest was out, the sticky is a good idea
S0.M,EB0A.RD/ IS BACK NIIGGGGGGGGEEEEEEEEEERRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRSSSSSSSSSSSSSS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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>>609
Is Issue #9 finished? Or there an ETA for it later this year?
Replies: >>613
>>612
We have several projects in progress right now, Issue #9 included, but its release is probably another six months away.

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/lit/ is for the discussion of literature, specifically books (fiction & non-fiction), short stories, poetry, creative writing, etc. If you want to discuss religion, go to >>>/r/. If you want to discuss politics, go to >>>/pol/. Humanities, history, and philosophical discussion can go on either here, /r/, or /pol/, but those discussions of philosophy that take place on /lit/ should be based around specific philosophical works to which posters can refer.

Check the wiki, the catalog, and the archive before asking for advice or recommendations, and please refrain from starting new threads for questions that can be answered by a search engine.

Online Libraries:
https://annas-archive.org/
https://library.frenschan.org/

/lit/ is a slow board! Please take the time to read what others have written, and try to make thoughtful, well-written posts of your own. Bump replies are not necessary.
Last edited by seventhunders

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What are your thoughts on Fyodor Dostoevsky’s hit novel “Crime and Punishment”? Are any of his other works worth reading too?
5 replies omitted. View the full thread
>>546 (OP) 
>Are any of his other works worth reading too?
The Idiot is really good. I liked it better than Crime and Punishment.
A lot of people keep telling me to read Brothers Karamazov, but I’ve heard it’s very emotionally heavy, so I’ve been putting it off.

The Idiot and Crime and Punishment are similar in that they both have main characters that are kind of schizo, but in The Idiot, he’s more of a lighthearted, romantic schizo so it makes for an enjoyable read. 
It’s cathartic, bc I relate to the mc- he tells the truth even if it comes out weird and people love him for his childlike honesty and disregard of social norms
>>546 (OP) 
House of the Dead is pretty great. It is a fictional account of his very real experience in prison, it was kind of understood that he was writing about his experience in prison but he had to change a lot of shit to make it past the censors of the time. Still, a lot of good stuff made it in there and he writes it with his usual skill. My favorite work of his, it's not too long either.
Replies: >>591
>>589
This was my favorite as well.

>>546 (OP) 
Notes from Underground to understand the mind of a 19th-centuary NEET
>>546 (OP) 
Absolutely mogs, but I think Idiot and TBK are better. In general his books showcase that blend between literature and philosophy I love so much
It's very well written but extremely depressing. It's pages and pages of the internal dialog of a raving lunatic and murderer, set against a backdrop that as an American I would call reminiscent of the great depression.

I've tried twice and have only made it about half way through it.

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Based or cringe?
Replies: >>218 >>221 >>607
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what kind of cunt is opposed to cats in bookstores?
>>190 (OP) 
It's fine as long as you don't have a tomcat spraying piss on the literature. People forget what animals are actually like before mutilation.
>>190 (OP) 
>Based or cringe?
you fookin' what mate?
Replies: >>224
>>221
Keyed or locked
>>190 (OP) 
toxoplasmosis is cringe, so cats are cringe. bookstore dogs are based

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What are the best books for understanding women
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>>327
I'm really disappointed with this shit. I think he's lying but the amount of cuck shit and white women "looking for black passion" going to ghettos was blackpilling.
Replies: >>565
>>564
>I think he's lying
He exaggerates things such as his IQ and other factors. The prison stints, his methods, the amount of time it took to learn them, and the other details all appear to be genuine from both my assessment and historians. A lot of the anecdotes (especially the extremely embarrassing but hilarious tranny incident) seem too self-humiliating to have been false. I didn't detect anything false with his stories about the different women, how he attracted them, knew their psychology, and exploited it even if they were hardened whores or fresh virgins.
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>>565
You can actually watch Iceberg Slim's interviews on YouTube. I'm convinced Kanye West and others stole the idea of wearing a mask when discussing the jews from Iceberg. The resemblance is too uncanny.
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Ignore everything in this thread. Read this.
(written by a woman too lmao)
Replies: >>606
>>583
>read this foidfic anon
no I will not read anything written by a woman

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If you want to know how the game of state power has and will forever be played against dissidents using the hidden hand, read and internalize the lessons of this book

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Me? Probably about 2000
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Basically the same thing. Except Libgen has the UL interface for Annas. I actually add a few books every year.
this guy has around 82,000 uploads 
lotsa magazines from the extreme left and right 

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>>229 (OP) 
ls -Rp /mnt/fileserver/books/ | grep -v '/' | wc -l
>24978

Get on my level
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From the science fiction called Shadow Organized Powder
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>>600
More from the same source.

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Name one (1) other writer who was also a scientist
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>>495 (OP) 
Voltaire
Aldous Huxley
Alex Shulgin
HG Welles

Idk im just spitballing off my bookcase these guys seem like scientists to me but it's very possible none of them are.
Replies: >>500
Arthur Clarke invented the communications satellite, not sure if that counts or not
>>497
Not bad for guesses. Voltaire did mess around in a lab at the Château de Cirey but he admitted he was never very good at math
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>>495 (OP) 

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Why are banned books displays at bookstores always filled with books they forced me to read in elementary schools?
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Loompanics unlimited was the real deal when it came to banned books
. All sorts of shit from making drugs to espionage.
>>501 (OP) 
let me know when Barnes & Noble adds Mein Kampf and The Protocols to the b& display
>>501 (OP) 
'On the Jews and Their Lies' by the real, no bullshit, Martin Luther. Yes, the guy that nailed his theses to the church door wrote a book about expelling the jews from Europe by force, actively encouraging his rulers of the day to do so. That this work is not included in nearly any bibliography of his work is despicable. It's about 60,000 words long.
Those "banned books" displays in bookstores often feature classics like To Kill a Mockingbird, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, or The Diary of ((( Anne Frank )))—stuff that was indeed shoved down your throat in elementary school—for a few intertwined reasons rooted in how book bans actually work and how they're marketed.

First, the term "banned" is frequently exaggerated or outdated. Many of these books were challenged or temporarily removed from school libraries or curricula decades ago, often in the 1980s or 1990s, due to complaints about racial slurs, stereotypes, or sensitive topics like slavery and prejudice. For instance, Huckleberry Finn faced pushback for its use of the N-word, even though it's a critique of racism. But they weren't outright "banned" nationwide; they were just pulled from some classrooms or shelves amid cultural debates. Today, they're staples in education precisely because they've been "vindicated" as important for teaching history and empathy. The American Library Association (ALA) tracks these challenges, and their Banned Books Week promotion highlights them to celebrate free speech, drawing from a list that's heavy on school-assigned lit.

Second, bookstores and publishers love the irony and buzz. These displays are less about current censorship and more about nostalgia-driven sales. Titles you read in school are familiar, so they're easy hooks for adult buyers reminiscing or parents grabbing "edgy" reads for
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>>593
Denial-of-distribution, aka, sellers of books both legal and illegal is the key phrase for books and material which is actually worth reading and studying. White Resistance and many other titles are included; these are when the merchants and book vendors themselves are threatened if they offer you the titles of forbidden books, so they do not.

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PRESENTING FREN-Z MAGAZINE ISSUE #7

Original art, 3D renders, literature, and analysis, written by frens for frens. We'll be posting every page in this thread so that you can read the entire thing without downloading it. If you prefer, you can read the PDF on Archive.org without downloading it. You can also get a compressed version from the below Catbox link.

>ARCHIVE.ORG (Full-Sized)
https://archive.org/details/fren-z-issue-7

>CATBOX (Compressed)
https://files.catbox.moe/2uj07l.pdf

Starting off, we have the cover and a grip strength ad. The grip strength ad was fun to draw.
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Replies: >>541 >>563 + 2 earlier
>>531 (OP) 
Bumping. This is more important than anything else.
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Evidently a Number 4 gripper from captains of crush would be equal to closing 365 lbs . You could practically grab somebody's hand and break it open with hands like that
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Good to see you all [the FREN-Z crew] are still around and fighting the good fight. 
*salute*
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>>531 (OP) 
Bumping for one of the most significant contributors on this chan and FC.
>>543
fuck off with your shitskin svg

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