Books

We live in the only country that apologizes for its history and drags its ancestors through the mud. Antiracism and climate change have become a new secular religion with limitless power to outweigh everything else, even our freedom and personal-property rights. Starting in our universities, this national illness trickled down through K-12 until half the country was infected. In Goodbye Columbus, 2022, C. S. Crumley exposes falsehoods in this new religion, and proposes the best way to combat this madness is with laughter.

In The Nature of the Liberal Beast, Southern author and humorist C. S. Crumley rips the American left with a hard-hitting factual and historical analysis. The evolution of the media-education cartel, which he labels the “Liberal Beast,” is presented in a manner that will cause patriotic Americans to laugh out loud at the folly of liberalism. The author dares to challenge the sacred cows of global warming and racism that leftists use to sanctify their belief system, and then goes on to expose their indoctrination process occurring in our schools and universities.

In Blue State, C. S. Crumley portrays a future America in danger of becoming a one-party system, where freedom of speech and personal property rights have been overruled by political correctness, and where corruption and gangster tactics are routinely ignored by party members dominating the university system and the media. For decades, the party has also been embedding its members into the various permanent branches of government, cementing their hold on power through audits, lawsuits, and a host of regulatory problems for political adversaries daring to step out of line. Discovering this shadow government and their method of internal communications, a few courageous men and women must fi­ght for their lives against this new Orwellian nightmare, while trying to wake up a complacent and unwary public.

If you’ve ever felt like we’re being ruled by a foreign government in our own country, or noticed how those preaching fairness and tolerance are in fact the most unfair and intolerant; If you’re sick and tired of being “talked down to” by our media Lords and Ladies, or wondered how these liberal “Numnuts” managed to take possession of every printing press in the country, you will laugh out loud as Southern writer C. S. Crumley takes these folks to task, mocks their “cookie-cutter” mentality so hopelessly stuck in the sixties, and lampoons the “conga line” of blue state voters following them.

Years later, the story of what really happened in Vietnam can finally be told through the eyes of an Infantry soldier in the 173rd Airborne Brigade. Sometimes the victims are not always who you would expect, and as the story progresses you discover the enemy is not always limited to those on the other side. From the social turmoil and drug culture of the sixties to the exhaustion and hopelessness of the rice paddies, C.S. Crumley re-lives the violence and loss of morale that took place in America’s most divisive and controversial war.