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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Thelema For The Wee Ones, February 8, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Abrahadabra: A Beginner's Guide To Thelemic Magick (Paperback)
When I first received this book, I had heard many good things about it. Then I read it. First off, what bugs me most about this book is that is has no footnotes, no giving credit where credit is due, much like other books such as West Country Wicca and any and all Edwin McCoy books, which read like they were just thought up by the author. It is an exercise in egoticism and neglect. No footnotes, no index, no credit, even for the Stele of Revealing. The grammar and sentence structure is way under average. It reads like a story. Conversational gibberish. He talks about wearing women's clothing to sense what it is like to be another sex. This is supposed to be amusing, yet, to me, a Brit who enjoys dressing up as a women is as normal as an American enjoying beer, so I didn't get his point! It goes from worse after that, like wearing a pyramid on your head and theories on how you can get your body to release "magickal" pheromones to attract girls and should I even go on? If you have small children, maybe, like McCoy's Ostara book, you could show the basics to them this way and make them understand it, such as his oversimplication of the LBRP, but this is no Thelema book for adults, even beginners. If you must, buy Lon Duquette's Magick of Thelema, but my advice is buy Liber ABA and go straight to the source!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An Excellent Intro to Thelema, June 21, 2004
This review is from: Abrahadabra: A Beginner's Guide To Thelemic Magick (Paperback)
In a well-written, easy-to-comprehend introduction, the author provides the reader with a clear, concise outline of what to expect from this book and how the chapters are structured, dividing the book into three main aspects: Meditation, Ritual, and Philosophy. As magick contains all of these aspects, "the eleven chapters of this book deal with part of each aspect in turn. Chapters 1, 4, 7, & 10 deal with meditation, chapters 2, 5, 8, & 11 with ritual, and chapters 3, 6, & 9 with philosophy." To supplement the excellent, useful practicum presented in each chapter, a short list of reading material for further study is provided at the end of each chapter. At the end of this very approachable set of exercises, some of which are original, some inspired by Aleister Crowley's own work, and some old standards, is the complete list of suggested reading material. The entire book is well-organized and a pleasure to read and use. I cannot recommend this introduction to Thelema highly enough.
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A wonderful book for the Neophyte and Adeptus alike !, October 18, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Abrahadabra: A Beginner's Guide To Thelemic Magick (Paperback)
Rodney distills the thoughts, practices and philosophy of Thelema into a book a Neophyte can pick up and actually READ and comprehend... None of the usual double speak and cyphers one has grown to expect in a Magickal book. This is a must read for any aspirant to the Great Work of Thelema
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