Frank Raymond was born in the Indian subcontinent and spent his early life in Calcutta, Darjeeling, and Dhaka in Bangladesh.
He went to college and university in England and witnessed at firsthand the Marxism and anti-white racial indoctrination that was undermining the country and the cultural Marxism that dominated the universities.
Returning to Bangladesh he spent many hard years running an industrial business and immersing himself in the mind and culture of the people of the Indian subcontinent.
At 39 he moved to Canada and has since lived in Vancouver.
As he began to realize that Canada was not being built, but rather that a built civilization was being destroyed, he researched the slow slide and ruination of a once-proud Canada.
He has stood mute witness as the green, rustic, and charming Vancouver of the past was razed to build high-rises and replace green neighborhoods with slums and rabbit warrens of housing estates.
As a person of East Indian ethnicity with broad exposure to both the colored and Caucasian races, minds, and cultures, he is able to provide an outsider’s insight into the white mind and show how it differs from the minds of other races.
He stands for the principle that every race is unique and valuable, but he opposes the Cultural Marxist and ‘liberal’ tenet that the white race alone is non-existent, worthless, and dispensable.
That is why he has written the book Sweet Dreams and Terror Cells, a work of fiction and literature, but also a sweeping overview of history, anthropology, and the minds of various races.
This is his first book, but it is only the opening volume of a great saga, the saga titled When Giants Break the Spell.