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152 of 166 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Should you buy this book?
I love this book and read it again and again. Should you buy this book though? Well the entire text is available online all over the place. If you use a decent search engine like Google.com you will have no trouble finding it. So the reason for buying this book is if you wanted a nice bound copy of the text (In which case you have probably already read it a few times...
Published on July 17, 2000 by Novus Focus

versus
9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars This edition is ugly.
This is the worst print since at least the 70s. The hardback should make it nice but it doesn't. The ugly shape and doodly-lame gold embossings muss up the cover. The inside pages are way too glossy for my taste. The layout is not interesting.

The high quality scans of the actual handwritten manuscript are nice though.

This book is a 5/5...
Published on September 17, 2007 by Orwellian Disaster


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152 of 166 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Should you buy this book?, July 17, 2000
This review is from: Book of the Law (Paperback)
I love this book and read it again and again. Should you buy this book though? Well the entire text is available online all over the place. If you use a decent search engine like Google.com you will have no trouble finding it. So the reason for buying this book is if you wanted a nice bound copy of the text (In which case you have probably already read it a few times and know that's what you want and do not even need to bother reading this review).

If you aren't familiar with this book and you are curious I recommend first taking a look at it online and then purchasing "The Law Is for All : The Authorized Popular Commentary of Liber Al Vel Legis, the Book of the Law". The book of the law was kind of hard for me to read the first few times. "The Law is for All" is the Book of the Law with a Commentary by Aleister Crowleys. Parts of the commentary can really help out in studying the book of the law. Also I recommend visiting some of the thelemic websites out there (search "thelema"). Terms like Thelema, Nuit, Hadit, Khabs, Khu, Ankh-af-na-Khonsu, and Hoor Paar Kraat don't make much sense and are a little intimidating without a little outside commentary. There is also a very short paper called "Duty" by Aleister Crowley available on the internet which I think explains the major concepts of Thelema quite well. Highly recommended.

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39 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars To be studied, not simply read..., September 2, 2004
This review is from: Book of the Law (Paperback)
All the other reviews here express how I feel about this book. I would only like to add one more detail:

The Book of the Law requires serious, scholarly study. You will not understand it on the first read. Not unless you have Crowley's comments at hand, which is indeed a necessary companion to this text if you wish to understand it. Many people have put their lives into studying this book and still have not uncovered all of its hidden meanings. This is not a book that you can simply pick up and read one time through. Consider it as being similar to a full college course, because it will likely take that long to get a substantial understanding of it.

Crowley's comments on this text are published in "The Law Is For All," although I believe it's out of print. However, here is a link to a site with free electronic versions of various comments to this text, one of which is Crowley's own --> http://www.hermetic.com/220/index.html

I'll end this review with one of my favorite passages from Liber AL (the technical name of The Book of the Law):

"Remember all ye that existence is pure joy; that all the sorrows are but as shadows; they pass & are done; but there is that which remains."

~2:9
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21 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Gnosis for the New Age, June 17, 2005
This review is from: Book of the Law (Paperback)
Regardless of how some people may feel about Crowley, his works stand on their own. "The Book of the Law", is his most personal, central work, and Thelemite or no, you would have to lack a soul if you did not at the very least find much of the language contained therein as being quite beautiful, insightful, and inspired. This book will hit you in the head like a ton of bricks, and its prose and music is very comparable to many ancient religious writings, and we have the benefit of knowing that it has never lost anything in translation as it was originally written in the English language. For comparable writings....try "The Nag Hammadi Library", Carl Jungs "Seven Sermons to the Dead", and "The Holy Fire of St. Michael" by Richard Michael Willoughby.
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36 of 44 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Destroy This Book..., February 21, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Book of the Law (Paperback)
... Well not really :) Liber Al vel Legis can be viewed as an essay on the relationship of Man and "god". This book, "received" by Aleister Crowley on his honeymoon in 1904 is a powerfull work that can break through people's preconceptions (misconceptions?) of reality, religion and Man's place in the cosmos.

I have read this book more times than I can count, and always come away with new insights... not so much insights into the text, but insights into my own self. Reading this book is an agent of change, one cannot help being changed by reading this...be it for the better or the worse.

(Such is the reason for Crowley's famous Comment appended to the end of the text, and the joke in the title of this review.)

A previous reviewer blasts this book and paradigm for "borrowing" from other religions and beliefs, but to me this is the sublime beauty of it. Crowley or Aiwass (whomever you choose to think the author is), did steal and borrow from all religions, finding the common threads, and weaving a wonderfull web out of the best, and disposing of the rest.

Overall, even if one is not interested in Thelema, magick, or anything out of the "ordinary", I would recommend this short book just to challenge what you believe and what you hold to be true

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This is a book for people who love god, not hate him!, November 26, 1999
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This review is from: Book of the Law (Paperback)
In Crowley's AHA he states that it was essential for him to surrender to god at one point in his initiatory progress. It is sad to see that some who follow Crowley today (one reviewer below, for example) think he is a devil worshipper and only idolizes himself! He is nothing of the kind! He is no more of a devil worshipper than those who worship Lord Shiva! Unfortunately, too many of us in the West condemn that which varies from safe and sane fundamentalist dogma. Admittedly Crowley seemed to have an axe to grind with hypocritical Christians, and probably didn't like the tyranny of "one God" either, but to see a reviewer applaud Liber Al vel Legis "if you hate God" appalls me.

That having been said, when one reads this revalatory, short, poetic text, one realizes he or she is not in Kansas anymore. Three gods are presented in Liber Al: Nuit, a sky (as opposed to earth!) mother, Had or Hadit, the stern male, and Ra-Hoor-Khuit, an exceedingly wrathful male. The text of Ra-Hoor-Khuit is particulary disturbing, so much so that Crowley tried to forget and lose the book for years, before coming to accept it. The story of Crowley's initial rejection and ultimate acceptance is fascinating. This story can be found in Book Four (ed. Hymanaeus Beta)together with a reproduction of the original soiled manuscript of the text.

This book is a koan wrapped inside a riddle wrapped in side a puzzle. Have fun with it!

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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars This edition is ugly., September 17, 2007
This review is from: The Book of the Law: Liber Al Vel Legis (Hardcover)
This is the worst print since at least the 70s. The hardback should make it nice but it doesn't. The ugly shape and doodly-lame gold embossings muss up the cover. The inside pages are way too glossy for my taste. The layout is not interesting.

The high quality scans of the actual handwritten manuscript are nice though.

This book is a 5/5 stars but this edition is not. I highly recommend you read he Book of the Law somewhere else. And older version or even online. Or in Magick.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Grimoire Edition, January 9, 2008
This review is from: The Book of the Law: Liber Al Vel Legis (Hardcover)

I first read the Book of the Law in a soft cover edition and found it
to be a very focused occult text, with its own interesting and orginal
words of power. The hard cover edition enhances the occult sense and feel
of this book, I consider it the Grimoire edition. An interesting aspect of
Aiwass is that a later occult author, Robert Morga channeled a Grimoire
called the Grimoire of the Demon Ewaz. In my opinion, Ewaz is the same
Aiwass in the Book of The Law, and in the later Grimoire reveals very
interesting channeled magick. Both these books should be in the
library of occultists.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent edition of Liber aL, April 21, 2004
By 
"lykhan" (Gresham, OR USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Book of the Law: Liber Al Vel Legis (Hardcover)
Holy book or puzzle book/cipher text? Either way, this is a fantastic work; something everyone should own. I'm not into Crowley or Thelema, but there is no doubt that Aiwass is brilliant!

This edition of "Liber aL" is beautiful, and the best to be published to date (the exception being private prints.) Amazingly, and something that has been long overdue: Rose gets credit!
Of course, Liber 220 (typeset version of LaL) is included, and so is a wonderful reproduction of the original manuscript (extremely nice to have for further analysis of the book; though LaL purists may be dismayed with the version used.) This edition also includes the 'Stele of Revealing' with translation.

You can't go wrong with this edition of "Liber aL." Too bad the cover of "Liber L. vel Legis" wasn't included in the reproduction of the original ms.

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A book worth two looks, May 23, 2004
By 
This review is from: Book of the Law (Paperback)
I highly recommend this work to any Magick and/or Crowley enthusiast. Many of Crowley's slogans have found their origin in this peculiar little book (such as "Do what thou wilt..."). The bulk consists of three chapters dictated over a period of three days by a 'higher intelligence'(Aiwass)through automatic writing. Though on-line versions are available, this is a nice little gem to hold on to. This hard-cover edition also includes a rare copy of the original manuscript.

I also recommend the reader approach this book with a serious mind and draw their own conclusion. And PLEASE disregard the bigots, for ye shall deny yourself a wealth of information!

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Essential to Thelema and Crowleyanity, November 10, 2000
By 
"snowcatguy" (Eugene, OR USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Book of the Law (Paperback)
I've read all the reviews for this book (posted here) and in the face of its criticism and its praise (which I won't add anything too) I will say this:

This book (love it or hate it) is the prinicipal text of one of the major branches of modern western mysticism, and that is Thelema. It is everywhere on the internet and is regarded as sacred or holy in a vast number of occult orders and lodges.

Any serious student of the occult or western mysticism or "The Western Tradition" is remiss if they do not have a copy of this book in their library and have not at least read it a couple of times.

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The Book of the Law: Liber Al Vel Legis
The Book of the Law: Liber Al Vel Legis by Aleister Crowley (Hardcover - March 1, 2004)
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