The Book of Lies
Written by Aleister Crowley
Narrated by P. J. Taylor
4/5
()
About this audiobook
Aleister Crowley
Aleister Crowley (1875-1947) was an English poet, painter, occultist, magician, and mountaineer. Born into wealth, he rejected his family’s Christian beliefs and developed a passion for Western esotericism. At Trinity College, Cambridge, Crowley gained a reputation as a poet whose work appeared in such publications as The Granta and Cambridge Magazine. An avid mountaineer, he made the first unguided ascent of the Mönch in the Swiss Alps. Around this time, he first began identifying as bisexual and carried on relationships with prostitutes, which led to his contracting syphilis. In 1897, he briefly dated fellow student Herbert Charles Pollitt, whose unease with Crowley’s esotericism would lead to their breakup. The following year, Crowley joined the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, a secret occult society to which many of the era’s leading artists belonged, including Bram Stoker, W. B. Yeats, Arthur Machen, and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Between 1900 and 1903, he traveled to Mexico, India, Japan, and Paris. In these formative years, Crowley studied Hinduism, wrote the poems that would form The Sword of Song (1904), attempted to climb K2, and became acquainted with such artists as Auguste Rodin and W. Somerset Maugham. A 1904 trip to Egypt inspired him to develop Thelema, a philosophical and religious group he would lead for the remainder of his life. He would claim that The Book of the Law (1909), his most important literary work and the central sacred text of Thelema, was delivered to him personally in Cairo by the entity Aiwass. During the First World War, Crowley allegedly worked as a double agent for the British intelligence services while pretending to support the pro-German movement in the United States. The last decades of his life were spent largely in exile due to persecution in the press and by the states of Britain and Italy for his bohemian lifestyle and open bisexuality.
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Reviews for The Book of Lies
7 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5Couldn’t listen to this book narrator is horribly mistaken if he thinks anyone wants to hear this “Henery the 8th, King on a castle balcony” voice. Too annoying and spaced out.
1 person found this helpful
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5All these decades of hearing about this, only to listen to it and be thrown into utter fits of laughter, is just too much. How anyone other than perhaps young teenage boys could possibly take this gibberish mass of word salad seriously is beyond me. This is beyond, "not making sense". It's just words... lots and lots of words... It is either some half-baked attempt at trying desperately to sound mystically important, or a joke.