Skip to content
Paperback Domestic Enemies: The Reconquista Book

ISBN: 0972831029

ISBN13: 9780972831024

Domestic Enemies: The Reconquista

(Book #2 in the The Enemies Trilogy Series)

DOMESTIC ENEMIES: THE RECONQUISTA is a novel set in the not-too-distant future in the American Southwest, during a period of low-intensity civil war. The action takes place between Texas and... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Temporarily Unavailable

32 people are interested in this title.

We receive 12 copies every 6 months.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

the future, see it now

First of all, this book is NOT a mass market paperback! It is a trade paperback of the same quality, binding and print quality as Enemies Domestic and Foreign. What Bracken has done in this book is paint a picture of the U.S.A. as a third-world country. It's a pity that all the people who are working so tirelessly to make America into a third-world country won't read this book and find out what their life is going to be like when they succeed. And he has couched it in a fascinating story that keeps reinstating the tension again and again up to the very last page. "it was those [expletive deleted] illegal aliens--New Mexico just plain got overrun. It should never have come to this--and it all goes back to the federal government in Washington. If those traitorous Quisling [expletive deleted] had done their lousy jobs and stopped the invasion years ago, we wouldn't be in this mess today." (p. 416). "Well, Jim, it's not like the reconquista boys kept it a big secret, what they planned to do after they seized power. . . . (p. 438) "Radical politics and raw numbers. . . . The Anglos wouldn't fight for California when they had the chance and now their time is over. . . . "The la raza crowd called `em racists every time they made a peep about illegal aliens and the gringos crawled into a corner and hid." (p. 438) If you want to know how so many Americans got brain-numbed by PC and "multiculturalism", read While America Sleeps ( While America Sleeps: How Islam, Immigration and Indoctrination Are Destroying America From Within), another maverick book that a lot of Lefties don't want you to read. It tells you everything you need to know. A satisfying read.

Just this read this book please....

Welcome to the Jungle of illegal immigration and a goverment whose leaders with marlble sized balls are powerless to stop the influx of millions of border crossers turning the sovereign nation of the United States into a UN circus show of third world poverty, disease and cultural turmoil. Bracken has written it down, with the hard truthful reality that most Americans look the other way at, while the present and past Presidents pave the way for an American Union between Mexico, USA and Canada. OMG You want America to remain a Free and a Sovereign Nation, then read what just a few years from now could happen to America, because the invasion is happening now, and the land of the Southwest and it's citizens are at stake. Domestic Enemies has all the ducks in a row for you to target what is happening in America now. Read how Ranya Bardiwell fights back against all odds to help shape her future for her son and all freedom loving Americans, to live within Liberty and Justice for All. It's a great book with a great ending. Buy it and Read it please. AJ Lexington, MA

A timely story

Reconquista (Marxist invasion, land reform), US apathy/cooperation, restrictive gun control, anti-terrorism legislation and other extra-constitutional government excesses--all these elements support a non-stop, action filled new story about our favorite dark-haired, "ultra-lightening" babe, Ranya Bardiwell, six years after we last left her in Enemies Foreign and Domestic (EFD). Sequels seldom live up to readers' expectations. However, the fertile ground prepared in Matthew Bracken's first work is not wasted. We discover Ranya eeking out an existence in a camp for politcal prisoners, with no hope of release or knowledge of the whereabouts of her child. I had read the first few chapters of the novel online last year and was primed for resolution. As the story/threads developed, I could anticipate to some degree where we were going, but Bracken skillfully keeps you guessing. I especially appreciate Bracken's accurate depiction of weapons use, unlike much of the outlandish skills of many greater-than-life protagonists in other works in this genre. What makes his two works sing in my estimation are the carefully crafted 3D characters who exist in a world not improbable.

Domestic Enemies

Are you tired of novels where everything is Politically Correct?' Then sit back, pour yourself a cup of coffee, and prepare to be pulled into a place where the P.C. crowd doesn't exist in any meaningful way. Domestic Enemies, the second installment of Matt Bracken's Trilogy, is an outstanding piece of fiction. It traces the trials and tribulations of Ranya Bardiwell, who had lost her father and the father of her unborn child in Enemies Foriegn and Domestic, as she learns of her son's existence and what happened to him while she is in a detention camp. The detention camp is for gunowners, and anyone else who doesn't support the liberal leftist govrnment that is now governing the United States. It also covers the illegal immigration debacle, and shows what could happen if things are not changed, including a currency collapse. I found this an intrigueing book, as well as entertaining. There is a lot of food for thought here, all you have to do is be willing to let your mind digest it.

"Domestic Enemies, the Reconquista"

I usually expect the sequel of a solid book to be a bit less than its predecessor. I was delighted to find Matt Bracken's "Domestic Enemies, the Reconquista" to be even better than his earlier "Enemies Foreign and Domestic". The first book was solid, fast-moving, and enjoyable, but the second was even better. The subject matter of the second book is even more compelling than was the preceding book's, and Bracken's skill at developing his characters is impressive. I did something I've not done since reading John Ross's "Unintended Consequences", which was to take every possible moment to devour the book on its first reading, stopping only for sleep and aspirin breaks. This is an excellent book, alarming in message and compelling in tone. If you read no other novel this year, read Matthew Bracken's "Domestic Enemies, the Reconquista".
Copyright © 2023 Thriftbooks.com Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Do Not Sell/Share My Personal Information | Cookie Policy | Cookie Preferences | Accessibility Statement
ThriftBooks® and the ThriftBooks® logo are registered trademarks of Thrift Books Global, LLC
GoDaddy Verified and Secured