BOOKS

Unholy Alliances

Web of Hate

Party Favours

Kicking Ass in
Canadian Politics

The War Room

Fury's Hour

Recipe for Hate

New Dark Ages

Age of Unreason

UNHOLY ALLIANCES
Warren Kinsella is the author of 'Unholy Alliances: Terrorists, Extremists, Front Companies and the Libyan Connection in Canada.' It was published by Lester in 1992.
Excerpt: "According to Libyan officials, it was around 6:10 a.m. that Southam News journalist Christoph Halens landed on the grey patio tiles two metres to the left of the entrance to Tripoli's Zanzour Tourist Village...Halens had landed on his back, a short distance from the grimy walls of the sprawling three-storey hotel. There was silence. A strong wind was blowing across the Gulf of Sidra, and out into the Mediterranean. Above the parking lot, not far from Halens, a soggy banner read: IMPERIALIST TERRORISM YIELDS ANTI-TERRORISM... A member of the hotel's night staff found the journalist's body at 6:25 a.m. Halens was wearing a clean shirt, a sleeveless pullover, and a windbreaker. His eyes were open and a large pool of blood was forming behind his head... Gone was the notebook he had been carrying with him for two days-the notebook he had crammed with bits and pieces of a story about neo-Nazis, and militant leftists, and Libyans living in North America... Gone was the story Christoph Halens had died for."
"...profoundly important, tautly written and absolutely necessary."
—Books in Canada
"An exceptionally well-researched and engaging book...an admirable exercise in investigative reporting..."
—Toronto Star
"...a compelling and astonishing book...gripping reading..."
—Montreal Gazette

WEB OF HATE
Warren Kinsella is the author of 'Web of Hate: Inside Canada's Far Right Network.' It was first published by HarperCollins in 1996, was a national bestseller, and has won numerous awards, including the Ottawa Citizen Best Book Award. The third updated and revised edition of Web of Hate was released in 2001.
Excerpt: "One hot and sunny afternoon not so long ago, Terry Long strolls around his acreage, talking to a reporter. Leaning against his sawmill, a WHITE PRIDE trucker's cap on his head, Long looks off into the distance, into the future. 'It has already started,' he says. 'If you are waiting for the big shot that is going to be heard around the world, I don't think you are going to hear it. The prime motivating factor will be the economic situation... You saw it in the Thirties. It took 15 years of people starving to death and having their faces rubbed in the dirt before they finally saw the truth, as represented by Adolf Hitler."
When Web of Hate was first published in 1994, it caused a storm of controversy, receiving excellent reviews and reaching the number two position on The Globe and Mail bestseller list.
In 1995, when the trade paper edition of the book was released, there was only one web site devoted to racial hatred. Now there are thousands of such web sites all over the world - and no regulations governing their vitriolic content. Even more shocking, two of those web sites operate unfettered from Toronto.
Warren Kinsella has now updated his extraordinary insider's view of the Far Right in Canada to include an investigation of Internet hate groups and the ease with which they operate in our unregulated Internet environment. These are organizations whose previously marginal influence has exploded over the Internet, giving them a global voice and support. Kinsella makes a strong and convincing argument for Internet regulation, showing how groups like the Aryan Nations, the Ku Klux Klan and the Heritage Front are reaching out to students and even children on the Net.
Combining extensive first-person interviews with original investigative research, the updated edition of Web of Hate is an even more disturbing portrait of a movement that is spreading like a contagion throughout Canada and the world. The devastation it leaves in its wake will have a far-reaching impact on all of us.
". . . riveting. . . . This is investigative journalism of a high order. . ."
— Calgary Herald
". . . a compendious, intelligent and highly readable book."
— The Toronto Star
". . . well-written, well-documented, deeply disturbing. . ."
— The Gazette (Montreal)
"A chilling read by a brave writer."
— Stevie Cameron
"Remarkable."
— Saturday Night

PARTY FAVOURS
Warren Kinsella is the author(!) of Party Favours, published by HarperCollins in 1997. Party Favours briefly flitted onto various best-seller lists, like a beautiful, inoffensive little butterfly. It then met a harsh and lonely death, as all butterflies do.
Excerpt: "Ottawa is an unhappy, unpleasant little place, where a lot gets said and little gets done. Although it aspires to be much more, it isn't ever going to be more than that: a former lumber town, packed with hundreds of megalomaniacs essentially lacking in souls....I had come to Ottawa with the belief that the good guys and the bad guys were readily distinguishable, and that my job would be to chronicle the achievements of the former, and the misdeeds of the latter. But it hadn't worked out that way."
Now it can be revealed to a breathless nation, none of whom suspected it in the least: Warren was Jean Doe! Shock! Horror! In 1997, over a few weekends, Warren wrote a novel (his first and, hopefully, last) called Party Favours. It told the tale of an ambitious Liberal Finance Minister, scheming to overthrow a democratically-elected Liberal Prime Minister. It was a moderate best-seller, but not for long! Far-sighted critics like Warren's friends Paul Wells and Susan Delacourt lined up to be the first to beat the stuffing out of the well-meaning little roman a clef. A Liberal PM facing a coup led by one of his own cabinet ministers, snorted these high-priced nattering nabobs of negativity. What an absurd plot! What an implausible story! Er...whatever you say, folks.
The Globe and Mail called it "frothy," as we recall, and Clare Hoy liked it a lot, but that is never something to brag about. Buy it if you dare, and ask yourself: does art (even poorly-executed art) really imitate life? In Ottawa, bien sur.

KICKING ASS IN CANADIAN POLITICS
Warren Kinsella is the author of Kicking Ass in Canadian Politics, which sold as well as you might expect for a book released on September 11, 2001.
Excerpt: "Political reporters, as evil as they may seem to everyone here, are not an entirely bad. The majority will forgive a candidate's minor errors, as long as the flubs aren't happening every other minute. But God help the politician who makes an error of fact that is, well, funny. Reporters love to laugh at politicians, and so do voters.
So press accounts of Dan Quayle's June 1992 visit to an elementary school in Trenton, New Jersey, should be required reading for anyone seeking public office. Sitting next to twelve-year-old William Figueroa to help him with his studies - while a horde of television cameras recorded the exchange - the U.S. Vice President made a big-o mistake-o. Young William had gone to the board to spell the word potato, which he did, correctly. Young Dan instructed William to add the letter "e" to the end of the word. Published accounts note that the assembled press in the classroom grew very, very quiet, like hunters do just before they are about to shoot some big, stupid beast in the woods.
The next day, William Figueroa threw more dirt on Quayle's political coffin at a press conference, where the grade-schooler pointed out that the Vice President seemed like a nice guy, but he "needed to study more." Indeed."
Warren Kinsella is Canada's own "Prince of Darkness." From the moment he was recruited to help the Liberals in the campaign to unseat Kim Campbell in 1993, Kinsella became an enthusiastic advocate of tough, in-your-face politics - politics that infuriates opponents, but wins votes. Just last November, the national media reported that his style and tactics were crucial to the campaign that won Prime Minister Jean Chr�ien his third term and an unprecedented majority in the House of Commons. Now, for the first time, Kinsella lifts the veil on what really goes on inside campaigns - and it's not pretty. This is the good, the bad and the ugly of partisan politics, and Kinsella argues that all three are necessary for a healthy and democratic political dialogue.
But this isn't a cynic's book on how to manipulate the voting public. The advice from the Prince of Darkness is "stay on message, and stick with the truth." Those practitioners of the black arts who resort to lies and cheating are most often burned at the stake by the voters. And he marshals plenty of evidence and insider stories from the hottest campaigns and campaigners in Canada and the United States - among them, James Carville, Betsey Wright, Haley Barbour and Dick Morris - to prove his point.
You'll learn about push-polling, frugging, ratf**king, quick response, dirty tricks and oppo, and you'll learn how to counter them all. You'll be treated to Kinsella's Twelve Handy Tips for Surviving Encounters with Unethical, Unscrupulous, Unprincipled Political Journalists, as well as to his unique rating system on whose political reporting you can trust.
This is a must-read not only for political junkies but also for marketers and PR flaks alike: it is a handbook, not only on how to win, but how to make sure your opponent loses.
"TOP BOOK ABOUT CANADIAN POLITICS!" - Campaigns and Elections Magazine [Canadian edition]
"...highly readable...As many see it, the Alliance's slide into oblivion hit the point of no return when the toe of Warren Kinsella's shoe made contact with Stockwell Day's rump."—National Post
"...honest and wonderfully entertaining..."—Evan Solomon, CBC-TV
"...eminently readable...truly entertaining..."—Calgary Herald
"...a hard-nosed look at how to win political campaigns [by] Canada's version of James Carville..."—Toronto Sun
"...I loved this book!"—CBC Calgary's Eye Opener
"...savvy and brilliant..."—Sherbrooke Record
"...buy this book..."—Tommy Schnurmacher, CJAD Radio
"...entertaining..."—Montreal Gazette
"...a must-read for those who appreciate politics as a blood sport..."—Eye Weekly
"...interesting reading. Kinsella writes in a quick-paced, animated, highly accessible style."—Globe and Mail

THE WAR ROOM
The term war room, in political parlance, was coined by the team of U.S. strategists (specifically James Carville) who worked for Bill Clinton’s first presidential campaign in the early 1990s. In a nutshell, a war room is a political command centre where a candidate’s strategists and media officers work to counter attacks by opponents while gathering research to mount an offensive in an ongoing, immediate fashion.
Warren Kinsella’s The War Room, now in its third printing, profiles and analyzes some of the best political warriors and spinners around. He employs personal anecdotes, political wisdom culled from his extensive experience on Liberal Party federal and provincial election campaigns, historical examples from other Canadian and American campaigns, and generous amounts of humour to deliver a book about what it takes to survive challenges not just in politics but in any kind of business or non-governmental agency, whether it sells music, movies, cars, or computers, or raises money to preserve the environment, combat cancer, or save animals.
His book is a must-read for political junkies. I suspect the people who need to read it most are John Tory and his entire campaign team.
-- Christina Blizzard ― 11/12/2007
There's a lot of good hard information here... Kinsella has crafted a handy little guide for politicos and non-politicos alike.
-- Douglas J. Johnston ― Winnipeg Free Press
Warren Kinsella's new book ... is a must-read for anyone interested in political campaigning in Canada ...Warren is a wordsmith, so The War Room is an easy, breezy read ... I wish I'd had the chance to read The War Room before I became Stephen Harper's campaign manager; it might have saved me from many mistakes and months of painful learning on the job.
-- Tom Flanagan ― Literary Review of Canada
In reading this book I felt his passion and belief in what he was saying. Some great insights written with ‘spit and fire.’ Great read! -- Gloria Reimer

FURY'S HOUR
No-holds-barred political strategist Warren Kinsella’s colourful, no-holds-barred look at punk rock, and how it influenced him and millions of other kids to strive for nothing less than changing the world.
Playing bass for Calgary punk-rock quartet the Hot Nasties might seem a strange way for one of Canada’s top political strategists to have spent his formative years, but in Fury’s Hour — Warren Kinsella’s exploration of punk’s history and heroes, its factions, failures and triumphs — he shares his unique view into a subculture that has long encouraged people to think big about the world.
From early meetings with icons Joey Ramone and Joe Strummer, Kinsella has gone on to interview a who’s who of punk: Sex Pistols Johnny Rotten and Glen Matlock, Fugazi’s Ian MacKaye, Billy Idol, DOA’s Joey “Shithead” Keithly, Bad Religion’s Brett Gurewitz, Blink 182, Good Charlotte and many more. Since he was a teenager, Kinsella has challenged his heroes to put into words the true value of the music. How, after decades of co-optation by the record industry, neo-Nazis and misdirected radicals, are new generations continuing what he calls punk’s “search for the real”?
In Fury’s Hour, with the iconoclasm and passion that have marked his career in politics, Warren Kinsella searches for the soul of a sound that invigorated the way he and millions of others have grown up — finding a way to turn anger into energy.
“I'm always fascinated by the musical creativity of youth. Just recently I was spinning some vinyl in Lisbon . . . Punk rock? Well, I'm still working on that one.”
– Rt. Hon. Jean Chretien, former Canadian Prime Minister (and Warren’s former boss)
“Once a punk, always a punk! Kinsella makes it clear that, in its origins, punk became a really fucking fun way to take on the establishment’s bullshit, and he shows why rebelliousness is still alive and kicking. It’s a bloody good thing that old punks never die, otherwise they would never write any cool books.”
–Joey Shithead Keithley, DOA
“Make no mistake, a book about Punk is not Punk Rock. But in this aggressive and energetic book Kinsella successfully tackles the complexities of what it is that makes this misfit youth culture so potentially empowering.” –Craig O’Hara, author of The Philosophy of Punk
“An insightful look into the world of music and politics when most people would rather hear about Ashlee Simpson and FOX TV.”
–Jim Lindberg, Pennywise
“Readable, angry and trenchant, Fury’s Hour falls somewhere between memoir and critical exposition, ranging incisively over the history of the genre.”
–Toronto Life
“Discussing punk politics, the birth of the Sex Pistols and why anger is energy makes this an intelligent read for any rocker.”
–Chart magazine
“He’s very sharp and candid on the paradoxical appeal punk has always had with certain elements of the far right, and certain muddleheaded proponents of “anarchy.” His belief in punk as a tool for social change reads like a tonic in an age of irony. He can convey the sheer heart-in-your-throat enthusiasm of the true fan with a verve that wouldn’t shame his critic hero Lester Bangs.”
–The Gazette (Montreal)
“His admiration for Joe Keithley, Joe Strummer, Today Vail and Joey Ramone is genuine, as is his enduring belief in the power of punk to change lives.”
–Calgary Herald
“The book–which combines a history of punk rock with a survey of punk’s various sub-cultures, plus a sprinkling of memoir from the author’s won punk salad days–celebrates the punk rock of his youth while still insisting on the relevance and vibrancy of the music today as a subversive, politically engaged movement.”
–The Globe and Mail
“Fury’s Hour succeeds because Kinsella combines a young person’s idealistic love for punk with a boring old fart’s perspective on the subculture’s blemishes, contradictions, commercialization, history–and, yes, its future.”
–The Globe and Mail
“Kinsella, a product of southeast Calgary, emerges from an earlier age as an angst-ridden teenage bass player with the Hot Nasties. Which, more than any political pedigree, gives him the credibility to write an intensely personal account of the punk movement. And when he picks, as his best-ever punk singles, Anarchy In The UKand White Man in Hammersmith Palais, then it’s obvious he actually knows what he’s talking about…. To be in the crowd of the White Riot tour, to sneak in to see the Pistols play under another name because they were banned throughout England, to marvel at the ferocity of the Damned, the ingenuity of the Buzzcocks, and to wait for another issue of Sniffin’ Glue–those were strange, important days. To understand them so well from the other side of the Atlantic shows uncanny insight.”
–The Calgary Sun
“In seven concise chapters, filled to the brim with interviews, first-hand accounts, captivating stories and historical factoids, Kinsella not only writes what could be considered a fairly definitive short history of punk–both music and lifestyle–but also lays out a passionate argument in favour of the genre’s continuing relevance… a great book and a worthwhile addition to the canon of punk literature (or literature on punk).”
–View (Hamilton)

RECIPE FOR HATE
How a group of Portland, Maine, punks defeated a murderous gang of neo-Nazis.
The X Gang is a group of punks led by the scarred, silent, and mostly unreadable Christopher X. His best friend, Kurt Blank, is a hulking and talented punk guitarist living in the closet. Sisters Patti and Betty Upchuck form the core of the feminist Punk Rock Virgins band, and are the closest to X and Kurt. Assorted hangers-on and young upstarts fill out the X Gang’s orbit: the Hot Nasties, the Social Blemishes, and even the legendary Joe Strummer of the Clash. Together, they’ve all but taken over Gary’s, an old biker bar. Then over one dark weekend, a bloody crime nearly brings it all to an end.
Based on real events, Warren Kinsella tells the story of the X Gang’s punk lives — the community hall gigs, the antiracism rallies, the fanzines and poetry and art, and what happened after the brutal murders of two of their friends.
Kinsella skilfully blends convincing depictions of both the punk scene and the racist underground with the hoary trope of a band of kids setting out to solve a mystery … a suspenseful page-turner that also gives considerable food for thought. ― Quill & Quire
Tension starts high and stays there in this unflinching page-turner, which offers a fascinating glimpse into the early punk scene and a moving testament to the power of friendship. ― Publishers Weekly
A compelling and jagged read. ― School Library Journal
Unlike anything he has written before. ― Calgary Herald
Raw and gritty and soaked in the passion for personal freedom, disdain for authority, and commitment to indie music ― TheStorySanctuary.com
Of interest to anyone interested in punk culture — not just the music, but the fanzines, art and writing of the period. ― Toronto Star
Kinsella’s book explodes off the page from the start...a dark and engrossing tale of punk-rock heroes fighting for justice. ― Booklist
Absorbing, jarring and raw. ― Globe and Mail
excellent ― Edmonton Journal
Kinsella’s book explodes off the page from the start … A dark and engrossing tale of punk-rock heroes fighting for justice. ― Booklist (U.S.)
a complex, multilayered mystery that highlights the energy and passion of youth while pointing a finger at issues like police misconduct, irresponsible journalism and the rise of the alt Right. ― CM Magazine

NEW DARK AGES
The X Gang face off with Earl Turner, a presidential candidate straight out of their nightmares.
It is a dangerous, divisive time in America. A far-right political candidate is seeking the presidency and stirring up hatred against minorities. The X Gang, meanwhile, have lost one of their friends to that presidential candidate — and are encountering manifestations of hate practically everywhere they go.
With his band, the Hot Nasties, about to embark on its first North American tour, and several recent murders in the punkscene linked to its gigs, Kurt Blank and the rest of the X Gang have some difficult decisions to make.
New Dark Ages is about surviving in a nasty, brutish, and short-sighted time — and whether one should just go along or fight back.
This fast paced, engaging and entertaining read is also extremely timely, and one we should all pay attention to as we sadly witness the rise of a dangerous new form of alt-fascism.
— Jim Lindberg, Pennywise
This book will hit home for older, politically aware teens looking for a story of unconventional heroes rising up against reckless hate.
Booklist
New Dark Ages takes readers into a world not often explored in teen literature — punk rock culture of the early 1980s. CM Magazine

AGE OF UNREASON
The X Gang must stand up for their beliefs in a changing world.
A new face of violence and hate has come to Portland, Maine, and the punks in the X Gang find themselves targeted once again. It is the early eighties, and the youth subculture they have grown up in is changing. Kurt, X, and the others have reluctantly concluded that they are unlikely to ever change the world with their punk anthems, but that injustice is still worth fighting against. The friends lean on each other for the strength to deal with death, addiction, sexism, and racism they see all around them.
Meanwhile, the police and the FBI are on the trail of a killer, and a member of the X Gang holds the secret to the fugitive’s sinister motivations. Age of Unreasontells the shocking story of how hatred can become a cause, and how we must stand together against it no matter the cost.
Like the first two books of the series, Age of Unreason is a storehouse of information about punk rock and the culture clashes of the late 80s. Kinsella knows the scene and understands the kids who lived it and loved it.
CM Magazine


















