ERNST Jünger (1895–1998), who lived a long and fulfilling life, became one of Germany's most admired literary figures. He is best remembered for his detailed memoirs as a lieutenant and commander in the First World War, a period which is forever immortalised in 'The Storm of Steel' (1920). Jünger, who was heavily decorated for his wartime exploits, was also a leading German intellectual and produced several philosophical novels, among them 'On the Marble Cliffs' (1939), 'Heliopolis' (1949), 'The Glass Bees' (1957), 'Eumeswil' (1977), 'Aladdin's Problem' (1983) and 'A Dangerous Encounter' (1985). Another dimension to Ernst Jünger was his interest in politics and a firm opposition to both democracy and liberalism. In association with men such as Oswald Spengler, Arthur Moeller van den Bruck, Ernst von Salomon, Carl Schmitt and Ernst Niekisch, he performed a leading role in the ranks of the Conservative Revolution. First published in 2012, the essays in this revised and reformatted volume are now in high demand. Chapters include Ernst Jünger: A Portrait of An Anarch; The Balkanization of the System: Ernst Jünger and the Endtimes; Jünger and the Third Reich; “Between the Gods and the Titans”; Ernst Jünger as an Icon of “the Fascist Style”: The Ideological and Biographical Implications; East & West: Ernst Jünger's Der gordische Knoten; and A Charmed Life: The Military Adventures of Ernst Jünger. The contributors include Troy Southgate, K.R. Bolton, Keith Preston, Tomislav Sunic, Elena Semenyaka, Dimitris Michalopoulos, Alain De Benoist and Julius Evola.