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TBR 2013

A JOURNAL OF NATIONALIST THOUGHT & HISTORY

Archives & Back Issues 2013

We are proud to offer our print magazine The Barnes Review online in our Archive. Most of the back issues can still be purchased as hard copies. Some of the older issues are sold out, but we are working on getting them online as free PDF downloads.

Prices vary from issue to issue. In case you buy more than two copies of one or several issues, we give a discount of 20% on the total. The discount will be calculated and listed during the checkout procedure.

All 2013 issues are 8.5"×11", saddle stitched, 64 pp., printed in 2 colors throughout.

In order to go to our The Barnes Review subscription page, please click here.

In additon, we also offer:

  • Bound volumes of The Barnes Review, available for most years. All issues published during one year are contained in a sturdy vinyl, library-style binder. Uncirculated, pristine issues are used, a great gift for family and friends as well as being a wonderful addition to your own historic library. Shipping cost for the U.S. is included in the price of $99 each. Shipping cost to Canada is $20, all other countries $30 per bound volume
  • Empty Binders are available for all years, starting with October 1994/1995. The price is $25, including shipping in the U.S. Shipping cost to Canada is $11, all other countries $22.

To order bound volumes or empty binders, please click here, call us at 877-773-9077, or contact us via our contact page.





Product Image Product Name↓ Price
The Barnes Review, January-February 2013: The Norman Genocide of the Anglo-Saxons

The Barnes Review, January-February 2013: The Norman Genocide of the Anglo-Saxons

Normans: Blessing or Curse? By John Nugent In 1066, the Normans—a mix of Viking and French blood—invaded England across the Channel from Normandy and began a ruthless campaign to genocide the Anglo-Saxon inhabitants. Few today, however, know the extent of the attempts of William and his minions to cleanse the isle of its unwanted Germanic settlers. THE WWII Genocide of the Gypsies By Santiago Alvarez A new holocaust monument in Berlin claims that 500,000 Gypsies were executed in death...
$10.00

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The Barnes Review, March-April 2013: Did Anyone Survive Custer's Last Stand?

The Barnes Review, March-April 2013: Did Anyone Survive Custer's Last Stand?

Germany’s “Big Apple” A-Bomb By Philip Rife It is almost an unknown fact to most of the world, but German military men in World War II were discussing ways to launch an ICBM against America with an A-bomb tip. How close were the Nazis to having this technology ready? Would they have used a two-stage rocket or could they have launched a missile strike from a sub? Find out. Nuremberg’s Tortured Confessions By Santiago Alvarez Shockingly, George Bush and Barack Obama’s Guantanamo Bay...
$10.00

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The Barnes Review, May/June 2013: The Sharp Sword of Spanish Revisionism

The Barnes Review, May/June 2013: The Sharp Sword of Spanish Revisionism

The Ship that Saved Jamestown? By John Tiffany It was called “the Starving Time,” that brutal winter of 16081609 at the Jamestown colony in Virginia during which 75% of the settlers there died from disease, Indian attack and lack of food. Luckily, a relief fleet of five ships, led by the Sea Venture , was sent with supplies. Unluckily, that fleet passed through what some scholars today believe was a category five hurricane. They not only ended up making it through (albeit a bit delayed) to...
$10.00

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