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Fiction Novel - The Holocaust Denier
'Without the right to question, what remains is indoctrination.' (Trevor Poulton)

Trevor Poulton
is an Australian solicitor. He is the author of the 2012 novel 'The Holocaust Denier'. In writing the novel, he created neologisms and neo-aphorisms for critiquing contemporary political and social discourse, particularly focusing on political correctness and freedom of speech.


A review of The Holocaust Denier novel
and commentary on its literary significance in the 21st century 
National Library Australia - 'The Holocaust Denier '- Tevor Poulton
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the Fiction Novel.  Paperbakc and electronic copies can be purchased on Amazon under 'Book'. 
The Holocaust Denier is a bold and unsettling contribution to contemporary literary fiction. Set in the fragmented inner city of Melboure, the novel uses the destabilizing voice of a uniformed anti-hero to interrogate history, identity, and the collapse of meaning in a post-truth age. 

The novel plunges the reader into the fractured mind of a Victoria Police Officer spiralling into ideological extremism, historical doubt, and personal collapse. More than a provocation, the novel is a literary meditation on the collapse of meaning in the post-truth world.

Stylistically audacious and ethically uncompromising, the novel charts a journey through urban decay, institutional hypocrisy, and personal disintegration. It confronts readers with the uncomfortable truths of Western identity, ideological seduction, and the limits of public discourse.

Blending existential inquiry, noir satire, and fictional intimacy, The Holocaust Denier resists easy classification. Its contribution to the literary world lies in its refusal to moralize, its defiance of cultural orthodoxy, and its fearless confrontation with the undercurrents of our time. It is a novel not of resolution, but of provocation — offering no answers, only the deep, unflinching questions that literature was born to ask.

Further, the novel evokes literary echoes of Dostoevsky’s nihilism, Saul Bellow’s tormented intellectuals, and Nietzsche’s ecstatic fatalism — particularly Thus Spoke Zarathustra. Thematically, it grapples with the underworld of human experience: moral rot, psychic breakdown, and the shadow world beneath official narratives.

Through fiction, author Trevor Poulton confronts the reader with difficult, at times incendiary material, to expose how ideology — any ideology — can infect, transform, and consume the self. The novel engages with taboos to explore how they can shape social and psychological reality. 

The novel unveils Poulton's negoloigsm 'Correctspeak', which Poulton contrasts with Orwell's concept of 'Newspeak'.  Orwell's Newspeak represents a static, rigid control over language, while Poulton's Correctspeak    ADD HERE THE MEANING OF CORRECT SPEAK .................is constantly evolving based on the changing moral landscape of society. This makes Correctspeak more flexible but also more insidious, as it can sneak up on individuals and adapt to new circumstances in ways Newspeak could not.  The Holocaust Denier is a bold and unsettling contribution to contemporary literary fiction — a psychological descent and political provocation in the spirit of Dostoevsky, Nietzsche, and Hesse. The novel uses the destabilizing voice of a uniformed anti-hero to interrogate history, identity, and the collapse of meaning in the post-truth age. The novel introduces Trevor Poulton’s concept of neologism ‘Correctspeak’

In Trevor Poulton's 2012 novel The Holocaust Denier (2012), introduces his the neologisms "Correctspeak" and "Incorrectspeak" to serve as critical tools for exploring themes of language manipulation, identity, and ideological control. These terms are introduced as replacements for George Orwell's concepts of "Newspeak" and "Doublethink," reflecting a contemporary evolution of language used to enforce political correctness and suppress dissent.
 
Set against the backdrop of Melbourne's police culture and and psychological renovations, the novel delves into the complex psyche of a Jewish Holocaust denier, challenging readers to confront the contradictions inherent in such a character. The use of "Correctspeak" and "Incorrectspeak" underscores the novel's examination of how language can be weaponized to shape thought and behavior, aligning with Poulton's broader critique of societal norms and historical denial.
 
By coining these neologisms, Trevor Poulton not only critiques the manipulation of language in contemporary discourse but also invites readers to reflect on the power dynamics embedded in communication and the construction of truth. The novel's innovative use of language thus becomes a mirror, reflecting the complexities and dangers of ideological conformity and historical revisionism.

The Holocaust Denier arrives at a time when truth is politicized, history is weaponized, and identity is fragmented. With disturbing insight and stark literary style, the novel asks: who has the right to speak, to question, to remember — and who gets silenced?

“This book is not about denial. It’s about descent,” Poulton says. “It’s about how individuals are seduced by certainty in a world where everything is collapsing — family, morality, even language.”

Ward Price's shift into simulated normality — from a rebel without a cause in early chapters to a family man, police officer, home renovater and 'denier' to actor concealing...................  — does not rid him of his past. Instead, he is subsumed by it, spiritually amputated. Trevor Poulton has captured that existential quiet that often defines the best modern literary fiction, akin to Hesse's Steppenwolf.

Title:               The Holocaust Denier (first published in 2012)
Author:          Trevor Poulton (solicitor, novelist, poet, inventor & environmental activist)
Genre:            Literary Fiction / Psychological Drama / Political Satire
Length:          95,773 words
Pages:            286

Poulton includes unique lingistics in the novel, created to fill gaps in our contemporary lexicon for ideas that have previously not been cleary understood or framed.  
           

EXAMPLES OF TREVOR POULTON'S LEXICON FROM HIS 2012 NOVEL THE HOLOCAUST DENIER

NEOGLOGISMS Created by Trevor Poulton for the novel. 

Correctspeak (also Incorrectspeak, Correctspeaker, Incorrectspeaker)
A neologism denoting ideologically acceptable or sanitized language evolved through ideological control and self-censorship. (It is be distinguished from Orwell’s 'Newspeak. from 1984.)

Club of Err
A mythic or symbolic intellectual brotherhood that embraces ideological missteps as a means of discovering truth. Turns error into virtue. 

Truth-library
Ward's personal archive of banned, revisionist, or obscure texts. Portrayed as a repository of alternate or "forbidden" truths that counteract official historical narratives.

Political Correct Thriller  
A genre of fiction-writing that exposes political correct language, tactics and strategies. (The expression is not used the novel itself, but defines the genre.)


​EXAMPLES OF APHORISTIC ideologically loaded phrases created by Trevor Poulton for the novel

'Only an ideology can realise a faith capable of completing the imagination of the self.'
Expresses the metaphysical need for a belief system to unify personal and historical identity.

'There must be truth without the need for compassion.'
Strips moral sentiment from truth-seeking. A Nietzschean or fascist-flavoured assertion meant to validate ideological severity.

'Compassion has a use-by date.'
Critiques the temporality and political utility of empathy. Suggests emotional responses are manipulated or ephemeral.

'The dead are dead, the living confirmed.'
Dehumanising aphorism that bureaucratises grief. Reflects the devolution of empathy into record-keeping.

'Truth belongs to the victors, the winners, the survivors.'
Restates a cynical view of historiography: that truth is constructed by power and outcome, not accuracy.

'Paradise is simply historical destiny.'
Reduces religious eschatology to materialist conquest.

'Life is a near-death experience.'
An existentialist restatement of human transience.

'Zionist enlightenment pills.'
A sardonic expression that characterizes mainstream history as drug-induced propaganda.


A novel of uncompromising intellectual ambition 
​

This novel is bold, fiercely intelligent, and existentially dangerous. It doesn't pander to mainstream sensibilities or safe discourse. Instead, it plunges into the murky waters of moral relativism, identity fragmentation, revisionist historiography, and postmodern nihilism.
​
Ward Price is a protagonist in the lineage of Dostoevsky’s Raskolnikov, Hesse’s Steppenwolf, and Bellow’s Herzog — but filtered through a distinctly contemporary Australian lense, soaked in political irony,
spiritual confusion, and ideological extremism.

The Holocaust Denier is one of the most courageous and original literary novels to emerge from Australia in decades. It challenges dominant narratives, and mocks ideological certainties.
This novel deserves serious critical attention. It is not a safe book, but it is a necessary one.

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