• Home
  • Diversity + Proximity = War: The Reference List
  • Shit Cuckservatives Say
  • The Sixteen Commandments Of Poon
  • Alpha Assessment Submissions
  • Beta Of The Year Contest Submissions
  • Dating Market Value Test For Men
  • Dating Market Value Test For Women
  • About

Chateau Heartiste

Feeds:
Posts
Comments
« Monthly Cycle Game: A Teaser
Game Is Real »

Recommended Great Books For Aspiring Womanizers

September 4, 2013 by CH

Michael Blowhard once challenged CH and readers to look at what the great writers in the Western literary tradition had to say about courtship. Many responded.

Alas, it is not God’s plenty. A man who relies on literature for his models can easily get swept away by the glorious pedestalizing.

Ovid’s seduction manual, The Art of Love, is pretty uneven in its advice. Stendhal’s On Love is pretty good. Castiglione’s Book of the Courtier is a good manual for how to be an overall attractive man. (Both were used to good effect by Robert Greene in The Art of Seduction.) Moliere shows what not to do in The Misanthrope, as does Flaubert in Madame Bovary. Byron has some scattered good thoughts. Burke, from a more traditionalist perspective, has some profound thoughts on masculinity and femininity. I’ve never read Casanova’s memoirs so I cannot tell you how good they are as literature or as pickup advice. I haven’t read Laclos’ Dangerous Liasons either. It’s been a long, long time since I read Richardson’s Clarissa, with its famous seducer Lovelace. Freud expounds nicely on female narcissism.

I’d also throw in How to be the Jerk Women Love by F.J. Shark (truly a great classic in the annals of lit-ra-choor), Nine and a Half Weeks by Elizabeth McNeill, and Story of O by Pauline Reage. Even pulp romance novels, however hackish, can be helpful to your learned pursuit of utterly dominating a woman’s will and heart. As with the last two book recommendations, female authors will invariably reveal their pulsing erotic ids through their characters. The trick to reading romantic literature written by a woman is to pay attention to what TURNS ON the female character. Not what the character claims to want in a hypothetical boyfriend or husband, but what she specifically describes that got her tingling like a Van de Graaff generator. Editorial commentary can be ignored, because the prerequisite for becoming any woman’s ideal lover is to first become her actual lover.

Share this:

  • Click to email this to a friend (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window)

Like this:

Like Loading...

Related

Posted in Book Reviews, Culture, Game, Psy Ops, The Pleasure Principle | 97 Comments

97 Responses

  1. on September 4, 2013 at 10:29 am Stg58/Animal Mother

    You can also try reading the owner’s manual for women: The Bible. Lots of game in that book. Women loving killers, descriptions of men women want, etc. 2 Samuel reads like a mafia novel.

    LikeLike


    • on September 4, 2013 at 11:40 am stevie tellatruth

      Ya know, the Calvinist theologian Matt Slick wrote a little ditty while in seminary called “How to Woo and Win Women by Being an Obnoxious Jerk”. He meant it for fun but there’s a lot of game principles in it.

      His website has since locked access to it(shame!) but you get can the gist of what track he’s on from the TOC:

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      1. Regarding the Wooing of Women
      2. The Jerk Quotient
      3. Making a Good Impression?
      4. What does a Woman Want? A Real Man
      5. Girl Logic
      6. The Proper Use of Confusion
      7. What Not to Say to a Woman
      8. Being a Sensitive Man
      9. How to be interesting
      10. Using your face
      11. Live to Dress or Dress to Live
      12. You and Female Hormones
      13. The Mothering Instinct
      14. Conversation? What’s That?
      15. Last Things

      LikeLike


    • on September 5, 2013 at 2:15 pm Hugh G. Rection

      Not a very entertaining read though the way it is written.

      LikeLike


    • on September 8, 2013 at 8:51 pm aki (@DSGNTD_PLYR)

      I recently read a few chapters of The Bible (I’m an atheist) and I’ll 2nd this recommendation.

      LikeLike


  2. on September 4, 2013 at 10:32 am Alan Roger Currie

    No “Mode One” or “Oooooh . . . Say it Again”??? My ego is hurt.

    LikeLike


    • on September 4, 2013 at 11:00 am maurice

      I think the omission of all the recent crop of PUA material is deliberate- the list is about literature, not how-to manuals.

      LikeLike


      • on September 4, 2013 at 11:08 am Alan Roger Currie

        Well, my books are by no means literature … so I will give you that. But on the flip side, I have *NEVER* considered myself a “pick up artist” / PUA. My books are primarily about improving interpersonal communication skills … not about “gimmicks” and “scripts” to use with women. So, I do not think of my books in the category of “PUA material.”

        LikeLike


      • on September 4, 2013 at 11:43 am YaReally

        “My books are primarily about improving interpersonal communication skills … not about “gimmicks” and “scripts” to use with women”

        lol brb wearing my fuzzy hat out tonight cause its still 2004 apparently.

        LikeLike


      • on September 5, 2013 at 6:06 am FuriousFerret

        One question:

        ‘Who lies more? Men or Women?”

        LikeLike


  3. on September 4, 2013 at 10:44 am Coleridge

    Most aspects of game, if not all, are covered by Rosalind’s advice while disguised as Ganymede in Shakespeare’s ‘As You Like It.’ See also ‘Twelfth Night’ and ‘Much Ado About Nothing.’ In case drawings are necessary, see René Girard’s ‘A Theater of Envy.’

    LikeLike


  4. on September 4, 2013 at 10:46 am Backdoor Man

    Mickey Sabbath, the protagonist of Philip Roth’s “Sabbath’s Theater,” is the boldest of characters, nature’s animating life-force distilled in a depiction of dying, but still savage and raw male sexuality. The book is Roth’s best, and is among my very favorite novels. Highly recommended.

    LikeLike


  5. on September 4, 2013 at 10:53 am Gordon

    … Would you say these are… Great Books for Men?

    LikeLike


  6. on September 4, 2013 at 10:58 am Jake Seliger

    Nine and a Half Weeks by Elizabeth McNeill, and Story of O by Pauline Reage

    Along these lines, Never the Face is good too.

    LikeLike


  7. on September 4, 2013 at 10:59 am maurice

    You forgot “50 Shades of Gray”. Oh wait…. it was “Great” books. Knockoff mommy porn need not apply. Though the dynamic there is pretty clear.

    LikeLike


    • on September 4, 2013 at 11:48 am Libertardian

      Always worth a link to the classic review:

      http://delicioustacos.com/2012/03/23/book-review-fifty-shades-of-grey-by-e-l-james/

      LikeLike


      • on September 4, 2013 at 12:15 pm maurice

        Ha! That reminds me of this gag (?) book review of “The Secret”. Without question: Best. Book. Review. Ever.

        http://www.amazon.com/review/R2X2TB3S4O5I60/ref=cm_cr_rdp_perm

        LikeLike


      • on September 4, 2013 at 12:54 pm Libertardian

        LOL, “11,865 of 12,621 people found the following review helpful”

        LikeLike


  8. on September 4, 2013 at 11:02 am maurice

    I suppose “Gone with the Wind” counts – it was a book first, and the difference between Scarlett O’Hara’s attraction to Rhett Butler (alpha, asshole) vs. Ashley Wilkes (beta) is clear enough.

    LikeLike


    • on September 4, 2013 at 11:43 am Libertardian

      “Marjorie Morningstar” by Herman Wouk was written specifically to learn how the hamster works, so he could create realistic female characters in his later books.

      LikeLike


      • on September 4, 2013 at 11:51 am Amy

        Yes. I couldn’t believe a man wrote that book, it was so accurate. Although he couldn’t resist the fairy tale ending– the girl rejecting the alpha instead of the other way around.

        LikeLike


      • on September 4, 2013 at 12:48 pm Libertardian

        His next book (Youngblood Hawke) was a fictionalized autobiography. In it, he says his sister had her own Noel Airman, and the book came partly from her story. She also had her happy ending with a beta provider, but he implies she was lucky to do so. His fictional counterpart, Hawke, writes the same book (Evelyn Biggers) but gives her an unhappy ending; the book is a flop.

        LikeLike


      • on September 6, 2013 at 7:49 pm Stark

        Are you nuts? It’s a 550 page book. No thanks.

        LikeLike


    • on September 4, 2013 at 1:03 pm Lily

      Spot on.

      That was my first alpha/beta lesson as a girl. That’s when I first discovered what I wanted.

      LikeLike


      • on September 4, 2013 at 5:07 pm OralCummings

        C’mon Lily,as a girl you read nothing but Talmud,Talmud,Talmud!

        LikeLike


      • on September 5, 2013 at 5:02 am SFG

        Sorry, but women aren’t supposed to read the Talmud in traditional Judaism, and the modern liberal types aren’t interested.

        Now you put shrewishness and a high verbal IQ together in a woman and what do you get…modern feminism!

        Steinem, Friedan, Allred, all the Slate women writers…the list goes on.

        There’s a reason I celebrate Yom Kippur with a bacon cheeseburger and shrimp cocktail at my local German restaurant.

        LikeLike


      • on September 5, 2013 at 9:41 am Anonymous

        filthy kike

        [CH: Value not added.]

        LikeLike


      • on September 8, 2013 at 2:29 am Ben - AUS

        Anything can be twisted as a tool for evil. Even Judaism–the basis of the obvious Good of Western culture.

        LikeLike


      • on September 8, 2013 at 11:52 am SFG

        Sure, who wrote the Old Testament, the Germans?

        But there’s nothing in there for me now. I’m sticking to my schnitzel.

        LikeLike


      • on September 5, 2013 at 9:47 am earl

        Perhaps Lily is short for Lilith.

        LikeLike


      • on September 5, 2013 at 11:01 am Matthew King

        Ketiva V’Chatima Tova! Shanah Tovah! Mazel Tov!

        LikeLike


    • on September 7, 2013 at 1:25 pm Crazy Heart

      It has everything in it. I noticed the white knighting soldiers on both sides of the war.

      LikeLike


  9. on September 4, 2013 at 11:05 am Alec Leamas

    How about Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew? Specifically, the Burton/Taylor film adaptation.

    LikeLike


  10. on September 4, 2013 at 11:21 am adamsunderground

    It’s too archaic for a general audience, but Juvenal’s sixth Satire stiffens the sinews and summons the blood to identify timeless truths.

    LikeLike


    • on September 4, 2013 at 1:23 pm Rogue Male

      Saw this only after I posted below…:)

      LikeLike


  11. on September 4, 2013 at 11:28 am Ronin

    If you can French, read “Manon Lescaut”.

    -As a cautionary tale of everything not to do.

    Especially pedestalizing a Bernankified slut and thinking she can be saved, from herself; especially by Love.

    LikeLike


  12. on September 4, 2013 at 11:36 am cryo

    The Unbearable Lightness of Being
    Tom Jones
    Much Ado About Nothing
    The Sun Also Rises

    LikeLike


    • on September 4, 2013 at 12:07 pm RappaccinisDaughter

      “The Sun Also Rises”? Castrato game?

      LikeLike


      • on September 4, 2013 at 9:21 pm Anonymous

        It’s the ultimate aloof game.

        LikeLike


    • on September 4, 2013 at 12:13 pm Harry Morgan

      I’ll second the Unbearable Lightness of Being. And the Sun Also Rises, though it’s a funny choice given the protagonist’s unfortunate situation.

      LikeLike


  13. on September 4, 2013 at 11:41 am YaReally

    “My Secret Garden” and it’s sequel “Forbidden Flowers” by Nancy Friday. You don’t really understand female sexuality if you haven’t read these. And yes, your mom, your sister, and your Madonna one-itis have had similar fantasies.

    LikeLike


    • on September 4, 2013 at 12:20 pm maurice

      Those are not really literature, but pop psychology- albeit of an unusually accurate/politically incorrect variety. It was the 70s, so every freak flag got to fly for a bit, which led in some cases, oddly, to traditional truths being openly spoken.

      LikeLike


    • on September 4, 2013 at 1:29 pm Anonymous

      the second review for “my secret garden” is titled: “that tingly feeling!”

      ’nuff said.

      LikeLike


    • on September 4, 2013 at 11:58 pm Creo

      Hey YR, if youre with a chick and you get out that book and start reading some of the fantasies in it to her i would imagine that would be a good idea.lol. have you tried that? how bout to a chick on the 1st or 2nd date?
      i just read an excerpt of the first book..sounds like pure pussy lube.

      LikeLike


      • on September 5, 2013 at 2:20 am YaReally

        LikeLike


      • on September 5, 2013 at 4:52 am yeahokcool

        Ya, that shit literally just made me lol. Though, perhaps it can be blamed on the fact I’m just leaving work after working for last 22 hours. (Can we please switch places?????)

        LikeLike


      • on September 5, 2013 at 6:30 am Hunter

        Hey YaReally, left a FR here a few days ago https://heartiste.wordpress.com/2013/08/30/beta-of-the-month-epic-showdown/#comment-475253

        LikeLike


      • on September 5, 2013 at 3:54 pm Creo

        ahh shit man no not Bert and his nonblinking eyes

        LikeLike


      • on September 5, 2013 at 7:53 pm immoralgables

        Best meme-response I’ve seen on this blog.

        LikeLike


      • on September 5, 2013 at 10:30 pm Creo

        I dont deserve the Bert stare for that comment…besides i didnt phraze it right and im cooler than that..not by much tho..

        LikeLike


  14. on September 4, 2013 at 11:51 am Stg58/Animal Mother

    Peter Pan the Disney movie is chock full of game. I know, because I have watched it about 500 times by now.

    LikeLike


    • on September 4, 2013 at 12:23 pm maurice

      well, Peter is a rebel/bad boy of a sort. Although he does hang out with a fairy all the time.

      LikeLike


  15. on September 4, 2013 at 1:14 pm earl

    I see no mention of Jesus, Moses, or Homer in these books about courtship which is where every aspiring womanizer should look first to get the power to induce gina tingles and butthexings..lolzlolzlolz

    Or something like that.

    LikeLike


    • on September 4, 2013 at 5:09 pm OralCummings

      Does Hitler have a contribution?

      LikeLike


      • on September 5, 2013 at 2:25 pm Hugh G. Rection

        Try reading Mein Kampf (international bestseller). But in general his is an ideology of pedestalizing women.

        LikeLike


  16. on September 4, 2013 at 1:16 pm lagunabeachfogey

    I would add ‘The Girls’ by Henry de Montherlant.

    LikeLike


  17. on September 4, 2013 at 1:22 pm Rogue Male

    Juvenal’s Sixth Satire.

    … I am aware
    of whatever councils you old friends warn,
    i.e. “throw the bolt and lock her in.” But who is going to guard the
    guards themselves, who now keep silent the lapses of the loose
    girl – paid off in the same coin? The common crime keeps its silence.
    A prudent wife looks ahead and starts (her infidelities) with them.

    Are you even in this day and age preparing both a prenup
    and an engagement, and getting a trim from a master
    barber, and you have even perchance given the pledge to her finger?
    You certainly used to be healthy. Postumus, are you getting married?
    Tell me by what Fury and by what vipers you are goaded.
    Can you endure any Master-ess when there are so many good strong ropes,
    When high, vertiginous windows are wide open,
    when the Aemilian bridge offers itself to you – just right next door?
    Or if from so many options no mode of death strikes your fancy,
    Surely you think it better that a supple boy sleep with you?
    A boy, who does not conduct a nocturnal lawsuit at you, who wheedles
    no little gifts from you as he lies there, and neither complains because
    you are going easy on him, nor because you don’t gasp as much as he demands.

    lines 6.60-81 – Marry a woman and an actor will become a father instead of you.
    lines 6.82-113 – Eppia, a senator’s wife, ran off to Egypt with a gladiator. (alpha dude)
    lines 6.114-141 – Messalina, wife of Claudius, sneaked out of the palace to work at a brothel.
    lines 6.142-160 – Men love a pretty face, not the woman. When she gets old, they kick her out. Fuck yeah!

    LikeLike


  18. on September 4, 2013 at 1:26 pm Pax Dickinson

    Henry James’ The Bostonians is literally about the seduction of a feminist, how has that not been mentioned?

    LikeLike


    • on September 5, 2013 at 10:34 am Christine

      “The Bostonians” is Henry James’s send-up of life among the feminists, but it’s not his most engaging novel, and Olive is a bit of a l.u.g. anyway (that was the term in Wellesley for “lebsian until graduation”; maybe still is).

      Better to read “Portrait of a Lady” for Gilbert Osmond, a gold digging single dad layabout living in Florence who snags an intelligent but naive girl with a fortune, who rejects the marriage proposals of two rich guys before meeting him.

      Here’s the fun cover for an older French edition of The Bostonians.
      http://www.amazon.fr/Les-bostoniennes-James-Henry/dp/B0000DOR4J/ref=sr_1_4?ie=UTF8&qid=1378398565&sr=8-4&keywords=les+bostoniennes

      LikeLike


  19. on September 4, 2013 at 1:52 pm Uncle Elmer

    The Diaries of William Byrd are pretty hilarious as he rogures his way through 18th century Tidewater gentry, though not sure they would provide any helpful tips tips for aspiring womanizers.

    LikeLike


  20. on September 4, 2013 at 1:56 pm Beefy Levinson

    Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage, by Lord Byron. Hell, even a biography of Byron would do. He was described by one of his many conquests as “mad, bad, and dangerous to know,” which is a pretty good description of alpha.

    LikeLike


    • on September 6, 2013 at 5:21 am The Burninator

      Quite so, Byron was quite the rogue in his day. You can tell that immediately by how academia is trying to castrate and effeminize him so much over the last decade. I reality though he was a hell of a man, not just in love, but also a warrior to boot.

      LikeLike


  21. on September 4, 2013 at 2:02 pm James Breed

    Dosoyevsky’s Notes From Underground. This book has the best neg in recorded literature.

    LikeLike


  22. on September 4, 2013 at 4:00 pm Mark

    I just finished reading “Turn, Magic Wheel” by Dawn Powell and it has a good portrayal of an alpha male in the form of a novelist called Andrew Callingham who goes through multiple relationships with women. It shows how he sees women and how they see him.

    LikeLike


  23. on September 4, 2013 at 4:27 pm walawala

    9 1/2 Weeks was a great film completely misunderstood by feminists at the time and dissed as sexist and masochistic.

    But watch the opening and how the Mickey Rourke character totally games “Elizabeth”: push-pull, aloof, compliance testing like when he brings her to his houseboat then then starts making the bed. When she says he’s taking some liberties he starts to scare her by escalating sexually.

    When he finally bangs her the first time—about date 4 she is totally obsessed with him.

    That line: “I saw myself in you” pure gold….

    Great movie from a game perspective.

    LikeLike


  24. on September 4, 2013 at 5:17 pm wfprice

    The problem with relying on literature for advice is that it has always been consumed mainly by women. The first novels in China and Japan were romance novels for women (Tale of Genji, Dream of the Red Chamber), and the Victorian novels repeated the pattern. To see what women really want through literature you need to be able to read and comprehend women’s thoughts, which doesn’t come naturally to men.

    For most men this is a waste of time. They will never get it, and thank God for that! If all men devoted themselves to “understanding” women there would be no other accomplishments to speak of.

    Just teach men to view society in a hierarchical manner, with women beneath them as their charges, and it will serve them far better than any amount of study of female psychology.

    Come to think of it, that’s what the Bible, the Koran, the Analects and the Bhagavad Gita all do. This is the kind of literature men should read — the classics. Leave novels and “high culture” to the rare men who have the ability to read between the lines.

    LikeLike


    • on September 5, 2013 at 2:32 pm Hugh G. Rection

      Good point. Just compare a man’s book shelves with a woman’s (these days it’s a plus if she has one though).

      LikeLike


    • on September 6, 2013 at 5:27 am The Burninator

      I don’t see many women enjoying Heart of Darkness, nor anything by Dostoyevsky. Nor Poe. In fact, men did at one time consume copious amounts of literature. Where do you get your reading demographics through the ages to make such a claim? The only time I believe your observations to be true would be from the late 19th century forward, and even then men were well read as a matter of course at least through the 1960’s.

      Beowulf wasn’t written for chicks, dude.

      Speaking of which, Beowulf, for examples of how men should act. Supreme alpha.

      LikeLike


      • on September 6, 2013 at 11:52 am alexandrahamilton87

        Speak for yourself, Heart of Darkness is in my top 3. Hard to believe English was not Conrad’s native tongue.

        LikeLike


      • on September 6, 2013 at 12:22 pm The Burninator

        The key word, dear, was “many”. Attention to detail please.

        I do agree on the note regarding language. He shows no real tell tale syntax structure mistakes that I’d expect to see slip occasionally from a native Polish speaker. Fantastic mind and achiever.

        LikeLike


      • on September 6, 2013 at 5:40 pm alexandrahamilton87

        I was being just a little tongue-in-cheek. 🙂

        Yeah, I don’t either and my parents are Polish and only learned English in their late 30’s, so I’m very familiar with the common syntax mistakes. Conrad’s command of English was amazing.

        LikeLike


      • on September 7, 2013 at 1:13 pm Matthew King

        Polacks sticking together! Pride of Pole, I love it.

        Yes, Conrad was a genius.

        LikeLike


  25. on September 4, 2013 at 5:46 pm JD

    I think that the Marquis de Sade deserves a shout out.

    “The only way to a woman’s heart is along the path of torment.”
    ― Marquis de Sade

    LikeLike


  26. on September 4, 2013 at 6:22 pm Keanu

    You forgot Eat, Prey, Love

    LikeLike


    • on September 6, 2013 at 7:12 pm alexandrahamilton87

      “Prey”

      If intentional, hilarious.

      LikeLike


  27. on September 4, 2013 at 6:27 pm jacquesfelixdouglas

    I consider Casanova’s autobiography to be the greatest piece of literature I’ve come across. If you’re just looking for some straight forward pick up advice, it’s not the book for you. To appreciate the pick-up related value of his memoirs, you need to look deeper into the text and analyse his personal characteristics to understand why he was so successful with women, (his name, after all, is practically synonymous with womanizing now.)

    But there’s more to Casanova than just the fact that his affairs with women numbered in the triple digits during the 18th century; he was a genuinely extraordinary man. He spent every minute of his life plotting and scheming and finding a new way of getting what he wanted, and he had no regard for societal expectations. He fucked nuns and the wives of powerful men and even took the virginity of a woman the night before her wedding to another man (Casanova did it because considered the man to be unworthy of her and didn’t want him to have her as a virgin.) And he constantly got away with these things throughout his life.

    When he was finally put into prison he was given an intederminate sentence without a trial. He was put up in a high-security prison called the Leads which the locals all feared because the people that ended up there were never seen again and no one had ever escaped.

    Typically, Casanova found a way out through the roof of the 6 story building and somehow managed to get down to the ground and escape to France. The story of his prison break became famous throughout Europe and he became something of a celebrity. Alexandre Dumas later wrote his famous novel, The Count of Monte Christo, in which the prison break is largely based around Casanova’s real life escape.

    LikeLike


  28. on September 4, 2013 at 9:35 pm n/a

    As ever, from the ferocious Charles W.:

    http://tinyurl.com/CharlesWilleford-MiamiBlues

    http://tinyurl.com/Willeford-Custard

    LikeLike


  29. on September 4, 2013 at 9:48 pm Mr.C

    The Lucifer Principle: A Scientific Expedition into the Forces of History by Howard Bloom.

    LikeLike


  30. on September 4, 2013 at 11:23 pm Third Beta from the Sun

    Oscar Wilde. Don’t deny it.

    LikeLike


    • on September 6, 2013 at 5:30 am The Burninator

      Not so much actually. His writing is quite effeminate, even if you don’t know he was gay. He was talented and charismatic to be sure, but you can practically hear the lisp in his writings.

      LikeLike


  31. on September 4, 2013 at 11:37 pm Aureo

    Schopenhauer’s essays on women, love, art, men and society and moral are pretty accurate on their description, a tad romanticized and with curly language, but the message is clear and to the point

    LikeLike


  32. on September 5, 2013 at 6:59 am brunsy713

    Arthur Schopenhauer’s essay “On Women.” I always thought that it was a basic piece everybody read for game. I control+F’d his name and he didn’t come up.

    LikeLike


  33. on September 5, 2013 at 7:40 am Matthew King

    Every book written/movie made before 1960 is “recommended” insofar as it tells of the time before feminism corrupted both sexes. The generations we were born into will be a footnote in history. We are the anomaly.

    “Wait, you mean women wanted to be men at the end of the 20th century, and men went along with it?”

    Read history, fellows. It is the only way to put our fucked-up era in perspective. It was not always thus, it will not ever be thus.

    Matt

    LikeLike


    • on September 6, 2013 at 10:33 am The Burninator

      @Matt. – much respect, first.

      Odd story. I gather that you may not be a fan of Ayn Rand, that’s fine, but she had an interesting turn of a phrase when asked if she was the last of the capitalists. “No, I’m the first of their return”. I relate this to put the event from this last Wednesday in context.

      I make holsters, motorcycle equipment, horse tack, etc., I also have raised draft horses, and am usually found wearing a Stetson, including at the biker rallies I attend with my custom leather biker gear, belt, open carried Blackhawk and so on. Most folks who know me call me simply Cowboy, even the ones who have known me for years. I’m 6’3″, broad shoulders, huge arms/chest, great shape, etc. Had two HB 8/8.5 approach with big dreamy looking dopey eyes staring at me next to my motorcycle, one said “Oh my, we found the last man on earth!” And I replied “Nope, I’m the first of their return”. They liked it. (“That would be amazing!”, “I wish!” gush…tingle).

      Point being, I’ve had a similar view as you, that this age is unnatural and insustainable. Even the women can’t stand it, and many are becoming vocal in defying The Sisterhood about it. Throw a traditional unapologetic, unbowed masculine man in front of them and the teachings of The Cathedral go right out the window like cig butts out of a 1970’s car.

      Yeah, I ramble.

      LikeLike


      • on September 7, 2013 at 1:08 pm Matthew King

        Ayn Rand has her uses. She is an excellent contrarian for teenagers who have been forced to choke on the life-hating sputum vomited directly into their mouths from our child-indoctrination centers K-12. I credit her for awakening me from my dogmatic slumber at an early age.

        The problem is, once liberated, you see how poorly her Atheist-Russian-Female-Jèw philosophies have been thought out.

        She inspires by dint of her comic book portraits, by superheroes that cannot exist in the world. They are a good punch in the jaw, like every boy requires to become a man. Her one-liners are eternally appropriate, as you have discovered, if inadequate to the completion of the mission she urged us to take up as young men.

        Brother, we have to find a way to make real-life bonds among men of our sturdy, no-bullshit nature. This internet thing is nice with regard to making quick connections — maybe even indispensable, like Ayn Rand almost is — but its superficiality is contrary to our purpose. Glad to make your acquaintance.

        Matt

        LikeLike


  34. on September 5, 2013 at 6:20 pm Obstinance Works

    I’ve read some of Cassanova, the real ones. He had the the classy world game/playful adventurer angle.

    LikeLike


  35. on September 6, 2013 at 12:06 am daigoro

    Jesus Christ, does nobody read actual books anymore, instead of novelty entertainment?

    For the best masculine insight into female psychology and an extended poetic treatise on the primacy of sexuality in human nature, look no further than DH Lawrence. The man could write, and he knew the importance of maintaining hand. If I remember correctly, he even made off with his professor’s wife.

    The Rainbow, Women in Love and Lady Chatterley’s Lover represent pretty much the trifecta of phallocentric literature, written in the crucial period alluded to by Matthew King, when industrialism, Darwinism and Freud had just begun to lift the veil on Victorian notions of “civilized” society and behavior.

    But what’s the point in recommending something that would take effort on a PUA site?

    LikeLike


    • on September 6, 2013 at 10:42 am The Burninator

      The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand. The hero basically rough sexes the heroine, almost rape really, and she swoons over it. The hero is maximum Alpha/dominant. Written by a woman who was never shy about wanting men to stop being wimps.

      LikeLike


      • on September 6, 2013 at 7:14 pm alexandrahamilton87

        What’s funny is that Ayn Rand’s books first became popular in America with housewives in the late 50’s who loved the sex scenes, sort of like 50 Shades of Grey now.

        Not that there isn’t more actual substance to Ayn’s books, of course. But they were first popularized as bodice-rippers.

        LikeLike


      • on September 6, 2013 at 7:24 pm Rogue Male

        And after the movie version was filmed, Gary Cooper (47) began boning Patricia Neal (22).

        LikeLike


  36. on September 6, 2013 at 8:00 am Vince

    On being aloof: Camus: L’étranger (The Stranger).
    Don’t egg me boys: I still like The Game by Neil Strauss. Not for the techniques but for the awakening it gave me when I read it.

    LikeLike


  37. on September 6, 2013 at 10:45 am The Burninator

    Another entry. The Witch by Anton Chekov. Beautiful painting of the soul of women, if such could be alluded to as beautiful. In fact, a lot of Chekov is fantastic.

    LikeLike


  38. on September 6, 2013 at 11:48 am peterike

    From F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Notebooks, on his college days when he was a bit of a skirt chaser.

    “I didn’t have the two top things — great animal magnetism [e.g. natural alpha] or money. I had the two second things, tho’, good looks and intelligence. So I always got the top girl.”

    In other words, a smart striver who was able to game (intelligence) his way with women to beat out the rich guys. He was a noted exhibitionist who would act out (play the asshole) and gained female attention by it. He would act more drunk than he really was, for instance. One of his go-to opening lines with a woman was “Please fall in love with me.”

    A bit beta, perhaps, for these days, but this was circa 1914 when the society girls weren’t sluts and you had to get past the father to have any shot at them.

    Another interesting point was his competitiveness. His “ideal” girl was beautiful, rich, socially secure (status marking); but also, she was pursued. He wanted the girl to have multiple suitors, because beating them out was half the fun and made it more worthwhile.

    As a side note, after disastrously failing out of Princeton, years later Fitzgerald described his first visit to a hooker thusly:

    “It seemed on one March afternoon that I had lost every thing thing I wanted — and that night was the first time that I hunted down the spectre of womanhood that, for a little while, makes everything else seem unimportant.”

    The spectre of womanhood.

    LikeLike


  39. on September 6, 2013 at 2:47 pm Paleo Retiree

    Great posting and comments-thread. Many thanks for the link to me and my current blog too — we can use a few readers.

    LikeLike


  40. on September 7, 2013 at 10:42 pm Tom

    Want to reiterate what jacquesfelixdouglas said.

    No man can consider himself an educated seducer until he has read The Memoirs of Jacques Casanova de Seingalt. This series is a gold mine for more than just seduction.

    The book series is available for download from the Gutenberg site:

    http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/2981 , or

    http://www.gutenberg.org/files/2981/2981-h/2981-h.htm

    As an aside, note that the various Don Juan books are fictional works based on a character who became an archetype, similar to Arthur or Lancelot, used by various writers for their own purposes, none of which contain much of any use for real-world seduction.

    LikeLike


  41. on September 8, 2013 at 4:58 pm Linkage | Uncouth Reflections

    […] (and commenters) recommend some great books for aspiring […]

    LikeLike


  42. on September 8, 2013 at 8:44 pm aki (@DSGNTD_PLYR)

    “How to Be the Jerk Women Love” was also an episode of the original 90210:

    “Steve decides to market his pick-up techniques with a seminar class to show some guys how to pick up girls at the After Dark club. Meanwhile, Kelly balks at the request of sleeping with Matt, and later regrets it.”
    http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0522831/

    LikeLike


  43. on September 11, 2013 at 12:03 am Grant

    Although Philip Wylie is pretty much forgotten now, he did write a popular diatribe about American women in the 1940s that still rings true today:

    http://www.library.csi.cuny.edu/dept/history/lavender/momism.html

    The style is very reminscent of our own blogger himself. Was Wylie an unacknowledged influence?

    LikeLike



Comments are closed.

  • Copyright © 2018. Chateau Heartiste. All rights reserved. Comments are a lunchroom food fight and do not necessarily represent the opinions of Chateau Heartiste proprietors or contributors.
  • Visit the Goodbye, America photojournal website.

    Then cleanse your visual palate with a visit to the Welcome Back, America photojournal website.

  • Pages

    • About
    • Alpha Assessment Submissions
    • Beta Of The Year Contest Submissions
    • Dating Market Value Test For Men
    • Dating Market Value Test For Women
    • Diversity + Proximity = War: The Reference List
    • Shit Cuckservatives Say
    • The Sixteen Commandments Of Poon
  • Twitter Updates

    Error: Twitter did not respond. Please wait a few minutes and refresh this page.

  • Recent Comments

    brabantian on The Confound Of Silence
    Captain Obvious on The Confound Of Silence
    Anonymous on The Confound Of Silence
    Roy on Ugly, Misshapen, Tatted, Fat C…
    trav777 on The Confound Of Silence
    Captain Obvious on The Confound Of Silence
    everybodyhatesscott on The Confound Of Silence
    Captain Obvious on The Confound Of Silence
    Captain Obvious on The Confound Of Silence
    Captain Obvious on The Confound Of Silence
  • Top Posts

    • Ugly, Misshapen, Tatted, Fat Catladies Hate Trump
    • Slutty Women Are Unhappier Than Caddish Men
    • ¡SCIENCE!: The NPC Leftoid Hivemind Is Real
    • The Great Men On Holding Marital Frame
    • The Diminishing Returns Of Anti-White Virtue Signaling
    • Manifest Depravity
    • Beta O'Rourke
    • Revolutionary Spirals To Civil War 2
    • Demography Is Destiny
    • The Sixteen Commandments Of Poon
  • Categories

  • Game

    • 60 Years of Challenge
    • Alpha Game
    • Cajun
    • Krauser PUA
    • Rational Male
    • Roosh V
    • Tenmagnet
    • Treatise of Love
  • MAGA MEN

    • Alternative Right
    • AmRen
    • Anonymous Conservative
    • Audacious Epigone
    • Dusk in Autumn
    • Education Realist
    • Evo and Proud
    • Gene Expression
    • Hail To You
    • Hawaiian Libertarian
    • Lion of the Blogosphere
    • My Posting Career
    • OneSTDV
    • PA World and Times
    • Page For Men
    • Parapundit
    • Rogue Health and Fitness
    • Steve Sailer
    • The Anti-Gnostic
    • The Kakistocracy
    • The Red Pill Review
    • The Spearhead
    • Unqualified Reservations
    • Vox Popoli
    • West Hunter
    • Whiskey's Place
  • Syllogism and Synthesis

    • Alias Clio
    • Arts & Letters Daily
    • Deconstructing Leftism
    • Elysium Revisited
    • Feminine Beauty
    • hbd chick
    • Human Biological Diversity
    • Library of Hate
    • Overcoming Bias
    • Stuff White People Like

WPThemes.


loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.
Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
%d bloggers like this: