So are you trying to write historical fiction that it set in actual history, or mythological fiction that dramatizes older stories for a modern audience, or are you trying to write complete fictions inspired by actual history and mythology (sci-fi or fantasy)? The difference is how much research you have to do and the limits of what you can do narrative-wise.
If you want good examples of well-done historical fiction, look at The Killer Angels (Gettysburg) and Gates of Fire (Battle of Thermopylae) to see the sort of research extent you would need to do. You may find some good material reading ancient histories from the Greeks and Romans (Herodotus has tons of awesome stuff in it that no one hears about) or listen to Hardcore History which covers all kinds of cool topics.
If you want to take old mythology and spruce it up, you'd just need to read the source material, get a feel for the culture and significance of the events in it that don't make sense, and re-adapt it into cultural context (i.e. Rule of Cool the stuff in it). It's basically fan-book stuff with the mythology, and could be a good exercise on its own. As a child I got into mythology pretty well because there was a series that dramatized and fleshed out some of the mythologies into longer narratives while staying close to the source material. There's a reason why mythological stories survive for thousands of years, because they are inherently interesting to particular audiences.
If you are more inclined to world-build, go for a sci-fi or fantasy setting that draws from history and mythology and tells the story you want to tell. That medium will let you show the upsides and downsides and new sides of any subject without iron mental traps clamping shut in peoples' minds when encountering, say, government styles or politically incorrect philosophies. It's the most creative route that you'll have to draw up your own boundaries for to give it definition, but one you get going on it you can make anything you want.
Be sure to make the main character a trans nigger to confuse the fuck out of the censors.
Post-collapse interior America, looking at the balkanization and downgearing of things. The slow purge of hyphenated Americans, from the perspective of a man stranded in Louisiana, trying to get to the Pacific Northwest on foot and boat.
Get all those scifi Zig Forums greentexts together and craft a narrative.
thanks for the reply, I will add those to my list of books to read, I do think the route most likely to succeed would be to world build and create a new world for the story to take place in and just sprinkle some subtle red-pills in throughout the setting, keep it grounded in the horrors that already exist in reality. If I went the historical route I would definitely be trying to dramatize historical events into more digestible and entertaining stories for the modern attention span, books like Hero of Rome or A Farewell to Arms
All the greentexts on /x/ definitely provide some interesting inspiration and I have a feeling those types of stories would be easier to create because I would be able to utilize more fantastical bullshit, and I think books by authors like Cormac McCarthy show people do have a stomach for those types of gritty post-collapse realistic takes
books are patrician as fuck user
Chase Russell
Books are dying and no longer serve as useful propaganda If you were going to write anything useful you'd make it a pdf and spread it everywhere (Maybe charge money, like on kickstartertv) Otherwise reading stories about fantasy bullshit is forbidden in many places in the bible, and I just generally don't give a fuck about fake and gay ayylmaos, historical fiction, or any other flights of fancy that distract from the true goal of winning the culture war aka taking back America and then the world. No offense, but how in the heck would your book help the white man? (I could offer a few ideas as to how it could help, but I want to see if you can)
Benjamin Rogers
you don't think celebrating culture and highlighting the glories of the past would help to preserve it?
books are essentially where all these pedowood kikes get their ideas from in the first place
Josiah Myers
Celebrating them doesn't require writing a book about something which has already been written about, nor does it require colorful language or filling in the blanks with historical fiction. Celebrating history should be done with your sons and daughters, as you tell them of a bygone era when a few good men stood against a crashing wave of evil and were victorious, teaching them of the values they caught for and letting their hearts glow with the light passed on through millennia. And maaaybe have festivals or other such things to celebrate the greatest bits of history and tradition. Historical fact is exciting enough to one whose senses have not been dulled to oblivion.
Brandon Smith
Something similar to WW2 and Hitler, but a little more convoluted. Similar to a novel. Of course, you need to change some things to make it appear as a totally fictitioust story.
bump because creating our own media and entertainment is important
Kayden Myers
Why don;t you write a science fiction story in which the protagonist benefits from the counsel of strange wise men, ambidextrous albino elders who give him a potion that induces his hallucinations.
While high he vividly dreams of an historic game changer - a biological war that brings about a new paradigm for the world. As the dream begins a parrot named Kilgore Trout tells the story of a small, clandestine biology lab wherein the protagonist sees an user with a PhD in molecular biology. The user works with determination to design and deploy an ethnic bioweapon.
The parrot describes the ensuing, successful biological attack that [by chapter 2] secures the existence of our people & a future for White children.
For the ending maybe it's a dark & stormy night & the ghost of Rod Serling shows up.