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DARRYL'S LIBRARY
It contains 67 stories, each one short enough to fit on a single page, each one illustrating an aspect of the philosophy of the Chruch of Satan. The book is meticulously annotated with references to literature written by the church’s founder, Anton LaVey, as well as his successors, Blanche Barton and Peter H. Gilmore. MYTH AND RITUAL IN CHRISTIANITY BY ALAN WATTS Myth and Ritual in Christianity. by Alan Watts. This is a very different look at Christianity from how it is commonly understood. It says that Christianity is not so much a historical faith of God’s actual dealings with mankind; it is mythological in character, telling a story with symbols – a story that is told, not just inChristianity
THE ROAD BY CORMAC MCCARTHY The Road charts the journey of a nameless man and a nameless boy south through a post-apocalyptic America. They have nothing but each other and a cart of supplies. There is little food available. Nothing grows any more. The trees are leafless and ash covers the ground. The story is set years after some devastating FROM WITCHCRAFT TO CHRIST BY DOREEN IRVINE When I was fifteen, in high school, we had one period of Religious Education per week. For about half of the school year, this lesson consisted solely of our class reading through From Witchcraft to Christ, chapter by chapter. Today, revisiting the book two STONE COLD BY ROBERT SWINDELLS Every once in a while - not very often - you read a book that changes the way you think. And this is one of those. The tale is told from two distinct first-person perspectives - two diaries read concurrently, the perspective shifting with each chapter division. THE GUARDIANS BY JOHN CHRISTOPHER The Guardians is set in a near-future society which has two class divisions: you either live in an area called the Conurb or the County.. Life in the Conurb is fast. People work hard for a living and play hard. Rioting is a common sight on the streets, and the primary means of entertainment in this overcrowded society is holovision (presumably what television is destined to become). THE DAWKINS DELUSION? BY ALISTER MCGRATH This is a small book, merely 100 pages, written as a thiestic response to Richard Dawkins's book The God Delusion. Alister McGrath, the primary author, studied chemistry and molecular biophysics at Oxford, and moved on to study Christian theology, specialising in issues of science and religion. Naturally, I had already read Dawkins's book(also reviewed
WHY I AM NOT A CHRISTIAN BY BERTRAND RUSSELL This volume brings together a collection of speeches and essays by the famous philosopher Bertrand Russell. They are all, directly or indirectly, about the topic of religion. In the titular essay, the author explains his reasons for being unconvinced by Christianity. In contrast to the typical view that Jesus was a good man but not THE SATANIC WITCH BY ANTON SZANDOR LAVEY The Satanic Witch! An attention-grabbing title, if ever there was one. That said, occultniks and sensation-seekers may be disappointed to learn that the focus of this volume is not spell-casting in the supernatural sense, but in the entirely mundane manner of bewitchment by psychological manipulation - the effective use of feminine wiles,in other words.
ROOM 13 BY ROBERT SWINDELLS Room 13. by Robert Swindells. Robert Swindells rocks as an author of young adult novels. He writes fiction that is hard-hitting and realistic, filled with true-to-life characters, and endings which are not always happy. Room 13, however, is a childrens book, and unfortunately all those things that make his YA fiction so gooddisappear here.
DARRYL'S LIBRARY
It contains 67 stories, each one short enough to fit on a single page, each one illustrating an aspect of the philosophy of the Chruch of Satan. The book is meticulously annotated with references to literature written by the church’s founder, Anton LaVey, as well as his successors, Blanche Barton and Peter H. Gilmore. MYTH AND RITUAL IN CHRISTIANITY BY ALAN WATTS Myth and Ritual in Christianity. by Alan Watts. This is a very different look at Christianity from how it is commonly understood. It says that Christianity is not so much a historical faith of God’s actual dealings with mankind; it is mythological in character, telling a story with symbols – a story that is told, not just inChristianity
THE ROAD BY CORMAC MCCARTHY The Road charts the journey of a nameless man and a nameless boy south through a post-apocalyptic America. They have nothing but each other and a cart of supplies. There is little food available. Nothing grows any more. The trees are leafless and ash covers the ground. The story is set years after some devastating FROM WITCHCRAFT TO CHRIST BY DOREEN IRVINE When I was fifteen, in high school, we had one period of Religious Education per week. For about half of the school year, this lesson consisted solely of our class reading through From Witchcraft to Christ, chapter by chapter. Today, revisiting the book two STONE COLD BY ROBERT SWINDELLS Every once in a while - not very often - you read a book that changes the way you think. And this is one of those. The tale is told from two distinct first-person perspectives - two diaries read concurrently, the perspective shifting with each chapter division. THE GUARDIANS BY JOHN CHRISTOPHER The Guardians is set in a near-future society which has two class divisions: you either live in an area called the Conurb or the County.. Life in the Conurb is fast. People work hard for a living and play hard. Rioting is a common sight on the streets, and the primary means of entertainment in this overcrowded society is holovision (presumably what television is destined to become). THE DAWKINS DELUSION? BY ALISTER MCGRATH This is a small book, merely 100 pages, written as a thiestic response to Richard Dawkins's book The God Delusion. Alister McGrath, the primary author, studied chemistry and molecular biophysics at Oxford, and moved on to study Christian theology, specialising in issues of science and religion. Naturally, I had already read Dawkins's book(also reviewed
WHY I AM NOT A CHRISTIAN BY BERTRAND RUSSELL This volume brings together a collection of speeches and essays by the famous philosopher Bertrand Russell. They are all, directly or indirectly, about the topic of religion. In the titular essay, the author explains his reasons for being unconvinced by Christianity. In contrast to the typical view that Jesus was a good man but not THE SATANIC WITCH BY ANTON SZANDOR LAVEY The Satanic Witch! An attention-grabbing title, if ever there was one. That said, occultniks and sensation-seekers may be disappointed to learn that the focus of this volume is not spell-casting in the supernatural sense, but in the entirely mundane manner of bewitchment by psychological manipulation - the effective use of feminine wiles,in other words.
ROOM 13 BY ROBERT SWINDELLS Room 13. by Robert Swindells. Robert Swindells rocks as an author of young adult novels. He writes fiction that is hard-hitting and realistic, filled with true-to-life characters, and endings which are not always happy. Room 13, however, is a childrens book, and unfortunately all those things that make his YA fiction so gooddisappear here.
TARTHANG TULKU
Time, Space, and Knowledge by Tarthang Tulku. This book was recommended to me as a means of getting to grips with the philosophy non-duality. The author, a Tibetan lama living in California, approaches it from the Buddhist perspective, although he does not use any Buddhist terminology. The book places a heavy emphasis on visualisation exercises MYSTERIES | DARRYL'S LIBRARY Having reviewed almost forty books so far, it has recently struck me how much time I’ve been investing (or wasting) in mediocre literature. Life’s too short, as they say, so I’ve decided (for now) to delve into some novels that have stood the test of time. WHY I AM NOT A CHRISTIAN BY BERTRAND RUSSELL This volume brings together a collection of speeches and essays by the famous philosopher Bertrand Russell. They are all, directly or indirectly, about the topic of religion. In the titular essay, the author explains his reasons for being unconvinced by Christianity. In contrast to the typical view that Jesus was a good man but not LOVE CHANGES EVERYTHING BY DAVID ICKE The book Icke wrote after Love Changes Everything is his autobiography In the Light of Experience, which I have read and reviewed. It provides yet more insight into his past, and is an excellent book by comparison. Perhaps Love Changes Everything should be looked at as the one book by David Icke that should never have been written. LIBER KAOS BY PETER J. CARROLL And so, my quest to understand magical theory continues with another volume on Chaos Magic. I gained a great deal of insight and clarity from Carroll's prior book, Liber Null & Psychonaut. The present work under review, published five years later, has turned out to be not so valuable. We begin with heady material on BLADE RUNNER 2: THE EDGE OF HUMAN BY K.W. JETER The 1982 film Blade Runner was based on an earlier novel by Philip K. Dick entitled Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?. That novel is much quirkier and more upbeat than the dystopian movie adaptation by Ridley Scott. The plot is also significantly different, if I remember correctly. My first question, then, on approaching this PHILOSOPHY IN THE BEDROOM BY THE MARQUIS DE SADE While everyone's feeling naughty for reading E.L. James's 50 Shades of Grey these days, I thought I would instead delve into something by the man who gave sadism its name. My fascination with reading Philosophy in the Bedroom actually stems from the fact that I've got a THE BLACK HOLE BY ALAN DEAN FOSTER Novelisations are a thing of the past - the distant past. They were useful in the days when hardly anyone owned a VCR (that's video cassette recorder, since the term is no longer in common usage). Back then, the only chance of rewatching a movie was to wait until it was televised. So we had ON THE EDGE BY GILLIAN CROSS Gillian Cross invents a terrorist organisation called the Free People, which is intent on the abolishing of the family unit as a way of life. That might seem like laughable goal, but Cross expounds the views of the organisation in detail, and the Free People become all too realistic. The book is MICHELLE REMEMBERS BY MICHELLE SMITH & LAWRENCE PAZDER The first book ever to be written on the subject of satanic ritual abuse (SRA) was Michelle Remembers in 1980, co-written by Michelle Smith and her psychiatrist Lawrence Pazder. Over a period of one year, Pazder records hundreds of sessions where Smith allegedly recovers repressed memories of herself as a five-year-old undergoing aprolonged period
DARRYL'S LIBRARY
It contains 67 stories, each one short enough to fit on a single page, each one illustrating an aspect of the philosophy of the Chruch of Satan. The book is meticulously annotated with references to literature written by the church’s founder, Anton LaVey, as well as his successors, Blanche Barton and Peter H. Gilmore. MYTH AND RITUAL IN CHRISTIANITY BY ALAN WATTS Myth and Ritual in Christianity. by Alan Watts. This is a very different look at Christianity from how it is commonly understood. It says that Christianity is not so much a historical faith of God’s actual dealings with mankind; it is mythological in character, telling a story with symbols – a story that is told, not just inChristianity
THE ROAD BY CORMAC MCCARTHY The Road charts the journey of a nameless man and a nameless boy south through a post-apocalyptic America. They have nothing but each other and a cart of supplies. There is little food available. Nothing grows any more. The trees are leafless and ash covers the ground. The story is set years after some devastating FROM WITCHCRAFT TO CHRIST BY DOREEN IRVINE When I was fifteen, in high school, we had one period of Religious Education per week. For about half of the school year, this lesson consisted solely of our class reading through From Witchcraft to Christ, chapter by chapter. Today, revisiting the book two STONE COLD BY ROBERT SWINDELLS Every once in a while - not very often - you read a book that changes the way you think. And this is one of those. The tale is told from two distinct first-person perspectives - two diaries read concurrently, the perspective shifting with each chapter division. THE GUARDIANS BY JOHN CHRISTOPHER The Guardians is set in a near-future society which has two class divisions: you either live in an area called the Conurb or the County.. Life in the Conurb is fast. People work hard for a living and play hard. Rioting is a common sight on the streets, and the primary means of entertainment in this overcrowded society is holovision (presumably what television is destined to become). THE DAWKINS DELUSION? BY ALISTER MCGRATH This is a small book, merely 100 pages, written as a thiestic response to Richard Dawkins's book The God Delusion. Alister McGrath, the primary author, studied chemistry and molecular biophysics at Oxford, and moved on to study Christian theology, specialising in issues of science and religion. Naturally, I had already read Dawkins's book(also reviewed
WHY I AM NOT A CHRISTIAN BY BERTRAND RUSSELL This volume brings together a collection of speeches and essays by the famous philosopher Bertrand Russell. They are all, directly or indirectly, about the topic of religion. In the titular essay, the author explains his reasons for being unconvinced by Christianity. In contrast to the typical view that Jesus was a good man but not THE SATANIC WITCH BY ANTON SZANDOR LAVEY The Satanic Witch! An attention-grabbing title, if ever there was one. That said, occultniks and sensation-seekers may be disappointed to learn that the focus of this volume is not spell-casting in the supernatural sense, but in the entirely mundane manner of bewitchment by psychological manipulation - the effective use of feminine wiles,in other words.
ROOM 13 BY ROBERT SWINDELLS Room 13. by Robert Swindells. Robert Swindells rocks as an author of young adult novels. He writes fiction that is hard-hitting and realistic, filled with true-to-life characters, and endings which are not always happy. Room 13, however, is a childrens book, and unfortunately all those things that make his YA fiction so gooddisappear here.
DARRYL'S LIBRARY
It contains 67 stories, each one short enough to fit on a single page, each one illustrating an aspect of the philosophy of the Chruch of Satan. The book is meticulously annotated with references to literature written by the church’s founder, Anton LaVey, as well as his successors, Blanche Barton and Peter H. Gilmore. MYTH AND RITUAL IN CHRISTIANITY BY ALAN WATTS Myth and Ritual in Christianity. by Alan Watts. This is a very different look at Christianity from how it is commonly understood. It says that Christianity is not so much a historical faith of God’s actual dealings with mankind; it is mythological in character, telling a story with symbols – a story that is told, not just inChristianity
THE ROAD BY CORMAC MCCARTHY The Road charts the journey of a nameless man and a nameless boy south through a post-apocalyptic America. They have nothing but each other and a cart of supplies. There is little food available. Nothing grows any more. The trees are leafless and ash covers the ground. The story is set years after some devastating FROM WITCHCRAFT TO CHRIST BY DOREEN IRVINE When I was fifteen, in high school, we had one period of Religious Education per week. For about half of the school year, this lesson consisted solely of our class reading through From Witchcraft to Christ, chapter by chapter. Today, revisiting the book two STONE COLD BY ROBERT SWINDELLS Every once in a while - not very often - you read a book that changes the way you think. And this is one of those. The tale is told from two distinct first-person perspectives - two diaries read concurrently, the perspective shifting with each chapter division. THE GUARDIANS BY JOHN CHRISTOPHER The Guardians is set in a near-future society which has two class divisions: you either live in an area called the Conurb or the County.. Life in the Conurb is fast. People work hard for a living and play hard. Rioting is a common sight on the streets, and the primary means of entertainment in this overcrowded society is holovision (presumably what television is destined to become). THE DAWKINS DELUSION? BY ALISTER MCGRATH This is a small book, merely 100 pages, written as a thiestic response to Richard Dawkins's book The God Delusion. Alister McGrath, the primary author, studied chemistry and molecular biophysics at Oxford, and moved on to study Christian theology, specialising in issues of science and religion. Naturally, I had already read Dawkins's book(also reviewed
WHY I AM NOT A CHRISTIAN BY BERTRAND RUSSELL This volume brings together a collection of speeches and essays by the famous philosopher Bertrand Russell. They are all, directly or indirectly, about the topic of religion. In the titular essay, the author explains his reasons for being unconvinced by Christianity. In contrast to the typical view that Jesus was a good man but not THE SATANIC WITCH BY ANTON SZANDOR LAVEY The Satanic Witch! An attention-grabbing title, if ever there was one. That said, occultniks and sensation-seekers may be disappointed to learn that the focus of this volume is not spell-casting in the supernatural sense, but in the entirely mundane manner of bewitchment by psychological manipulation - the effective use of feminine wiles,in other words.
ROOM 13 BY ROBERT SWINDELLS Room 13. by Robert Swindells. Robert Swindells rocks as an author of young adult novels. He writes fiction that is hard-hitting and realistic, filled with true-to-life characters, and endings which are not always happy. Room 13, however, is a childrens book, and unfortunately all those things that make his YA fiction so gooddisappear here.
TARTHANG TULKU
Time, Space, and Knowledge by Tarthang Tulku. This book was recommended to me as a means of getting to grips with the philosophy non-duality. The author, a Tibetan lama living in California, approaches it from the Buddhist perspective, although he does not use any Buddhist terminology. The book places a heavy emphasis on visualisation exercises MYSTERIES | DARRYL'S LIBRARY Having reviewed almost forty books so far, it has recently struck me how much time I’ve been investing (or wasting) in mediocre literature. Life’s too short, as they say, so I’ve decided (for now) to delve into some novels that have stood the test of time. LOVE CHANGES EVERYTHING BY DAVID ICKE The book Icke wrote after Love Changes Everything is his autobiography In the Light of Experience, which I have read and reviewed. It provides yet more insight into his past, and is an excellent book by comparison. Perhaps Love Changes Everything should be looked at as the one book by David Icke that should never have been written.ROBERT WESTALL
This one’s my favourite. It’s the funniest of the bunch. The theme is the problems encountered in black market smuggling during war-time, and the product is, of all things, butter. The fourth tale is called simply “Rosie” and is about a very strange kind of air-raid shelter. My only disappointment with this book was that none of the LIBER KAOS BY PETER J. CARROLL And so, my quest to understand magical theory continues with another volume on Chaos Magic. I gained a great deal of insight and clarity from Carroll's prior book, Liber Null & Psychonaut. The present work under review, published five years later, has turned out to be not so valuable. We begin with heady material onRICHARD DAWKINS
The second half of the book is mostly concerned with slamming religion as a force for evil. Much of what Dawkins says is true, and a torch should definitely be shone on it all. The trouble is, the Christian is not overly concerned with the atrocities done by others, or the horrors done in the past in the name of Christ. BLADE RUNNER 2: THE EDGE OF HUMAN BY K.W. JETER The 1982 film Blade Runner was based on an earlier novel by Philip K. Dick entitled Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?. That novel is much quirkier and more upbeat than the dystopian movie adaptation by Ridley Scott. The plot is also significantly different, if I remember correctly. My first question, then, on approaching this PHILOSOPHY IN THE BEDROOM BY THE MARQUIS DE SADE While everyone's feeling naughty for reading E.L. James's 50 Shades of Grey these days, I thought I would instead delve into something by the man who gave sadism its name. My fascination with reading Philosophy in the Bedroom actually stems from the fact that I've got a THE NEW EVIDENCE THAT DEMANDS A VERDICT BY JOSH MCDOWELL Josh McDowell’s book, The New Evidence that Demands a Verdict, is written for such conscientious students, who wish to be able to hold a rational case for their faith when under fire from sceptics. The book also serves as a great information source for anyone, whether sceptic or believer, who wishes to become more informed about Christianity. MICHELLE REMEMBERS BY MICHELLE SMITH & LAWRENCE PAZDER The first book ever to be written on the subject of satanic ritual abuse (SRA) was Michelle Remembers in 1980, co-written by Michelle Smith and her psychiatrist Lawrence Pazder. Over a period of one year, Pazder records hundreds of sessions where Smith allegedly recovers repressed memories of herself as a five-year-old undergoing aprolonged period
DARRYL'S LIBRARY
It contains 67 stories, each one short enough to fit on a single page, each one illustrating an aspect of the philosophy of the Chruch of Satan. The book is meticulously annotated with references to literature written by the church’s founder, Anton LaVey, as well as his successors, Blanche Barton and Peter H. Gilmore. MYTH AND RITUAL IN CHRISTIANITY BY ALAN WATTS Myth and Ritual in Christianity. by Alan Watts. This is a very different look at Christianity from how it is commonly understood. It says that Christianity is not so much a historical faith of God’s actual dealings with mankind; it is mythological in character, telling a story with symbols – a story that is told, not just inChristianity
THE ROAD BY CORMAC MCCARTHY The Road charts the journey of a nameless man and a nameless boy south through a post-apocalyptic America. They have nothing but each other and a cart of supplies. There is little food available. Nothing grows any more. The trees are leafless and ash covers the ground. The story is set years after some devastating FROM WITCHCRAFT TO CHRIST BY DOREEN IRVINE When I was fifteen, in high school, we had one period of Religious Education per week. For about half of the school year, this lesson consisted solely of our class reading through From Witchcraft to Christ, chapter by chapter. Today, revisiting the book two STONE COLD BY ROBERT SWINDELLS Every once in a while - not very often - you read a book that changes the way you think. And this is one of those. The tale is told from two distinct first-person perspectives - two diaries read concurrently, the perspective shifting with each chapter division. THE GUARDIANS BY JOHN CHRISTOPHER The Guardians is set in a near-future society which has two class divisions: you either live in an area called the Conurb or the County.. Life in the Conurb is fast. People work hard for a living and play hard. Rioting is a common sight on the streets, and the primary means of entertainment in this overcrowded society is holovision (presumably what television is destined to become). THE DAWKINS DELUSION? BY ALISTER MCGRATH This is a small book, merely 100 pages, written as a thiestic response to Richard Dawkins's book The God Delusion. Alister McGrath, the primary author, studied chemistry and molecular biophysics at Oxford, and moved on to study Christian theology, specialising in issues of science and religion. Naturally, I had already read Dawkins's book(also reviewed
WHY I AM NOT A CHRISTIAN BY BERTRAND RUSSELL This volume brings together a collection of speeches and essays by the famous philosopher Bertrand Russell. They are all, directly or indirectly, about the topic of religion. In the titular essay, the author explains his reasons for being unconvinced by Christianity. In contrast to the typical view that Jesus was a good man but not THE SATANIC WITCH BY ANTON SZANDOR LAVEY The Satanic Witch! An attention-grabbing title, if ever there was one. That said, occultniks and sensation-seekers may be disappointed to learn that the focus of this volume is not spell-casting in the supernatural sense, but in the entirely mundane manner of bewitchment by psychological manipulation - the effective use of feminine wiles,in other words.
ROOM 13 BY ROBERT SWINDELLS Room 13. by Robert Swindells. Robert Swindells rocks as an author of young adult novels. He writes fiction that is hard-hitting and realistic, filled with true-to-life characters, and endings which are not always happy. Room 13, however, is a childrens book, and unfortunately all those things that make his YA fiction so gooddisappear here.
DARRYL'S LIBRARY
It contains 67 stories, each one short enough to fit on a single page, each one illustrating an aspect of the philosophy of the Chruch of Satan. The book is meticulously annotated with references to literature written by the church’s founder, Anton LaVey, as well as his successors, Blanche Barton and Peter H. Gilmore. MYTH AND RITUAL IN CHRISTIANITY BY ALAN WATTS Myth and Ritual in Christianity. by Alan Watts. This is a very different look at Christianity from how it is commonly understood. It says that Christianity is not so much a historical faith of God’s actual dealings with mankind; it is mythological in character, telling a story with symbols – a story that is told, not just inChristianity
THE ROAD BY CORMAC MCCARTHY The Road charts the journey of a nameless man and a nameless boy south through a post-apocalyptic America. They have nothing but each other and a cart of supplies. There is little food available. Nothing grows any more. The trees are leafless and ash covers the ground. The story is set years after some devastating FROM WITCHCRAFT TO CHRIST BY DOREEN IRVINE When I was fifteen, in high school, we had one period of Religious Education per week. For about half of the school year, this lesson consisted solely of our class reading through From Witchcraft to Christ, chapter by chapter. Today, revisiting the book two STONE COLD BY ROBERT SWINDELLS Every once in a while - not very often - you read a book that changes the way you think. And this is one of those. The tale is told from two distinct first-person perspectives - two diaries read concurrently, the perspective shifting with each chapter division. THE GUARDIANS BY JOHN CHRISTOPHER The Guardians is set in a near-future society which has two class divisions: you either live in an area called the Conurb or the County.. Life in the Conurb is fast. People work hard for a living and play hard. Rioting is a common sight on the streets, and the primary means of entertainment in this overcrowded society is holovision (presumably what television is destined to become). THE DAWKINS DELUSION? BY ALISTER MCGRATH This is a small book, merely 100 pages, written as a thiestic response to Richard Dawkins's book The God Delusion. Alister McGrath, the primary author, studied chemistry and molecular biophysics at Oxford, and moved on to study Christian theology, specialising in issues of science and religion. Naturally, I had already read Dawkins's book(also reviewed
WHY I AM NOT A CHRISTIAN BY BERTRAND RUSSELL This volume brings together a collection of speeches and essays by the famous philosopher Bertrand Russell. They are all, directly or indirectly, about the topic of religion. In the titular essay, the author explains his reasons for being unconvinced by Christianity. In contrast to the typical view that Jesus was a good man but not THE SATANIC WITCH BY ANTON SZANDOR LAVEY The Satanic Witch! An attention-grabbing title, if ever there was one. That said, occultniks and sensation-seekers may be disappointed to learn that the focus of this volume is not spell-casting in the supernatural sense, but in the entirely mundane manner of bewitchment by psychological manipulation - the effective use of feminine wiles,in other words.
ROOM 13 BY ROBERT SWINDELLS Room 13. by Robert Swindells. Robert Swindells rocks as an author of young adult novels. He writes fiction that is hard-hitting and realistic, filled with true-to-life characters, and endings which are not always happy. Room 13, however, is a childrens book, and unfortunately all those things that make his YA fiction so gooddisappear here.
TARTHANG TULKU
Time, Space, and Knowledge by Tarthang Tulku. This book was recommended to me as a means of getting to grips with the philosophy non-duality. The author, a Tibetan lama living in California, approaches it from the Buddhist perspective, although he does not use any Buddhist terminology. The book places a heavy emphasis on visualisation exercises MYSTERIES | DARRYL'S LIBRARY Having reviewed almost forty books so far, it has recently struck me how much time I’ve been investing (or wasting) in mediocre literature. Life’s too short, as they say, so I’ve decided (for now) to delve into some novels that have stood the test of time. LOVE CHANGES EVERYTHING BY DAVID ICKE The book Icke wrote after Love Changes Everything is his autobiography In the Light of Experience, which I have read and reviewed. It provides yet more insight into his past, and is an excellent book by comparison. Perhaps Love Changes Everything should be looked at as the one book by David Icke that should never have been written.ROBERT WESTALL
This one’s my favourite. It’s the funniest of the bunch. The theme is the problems encountered in black market smuggling during war-time, and the product is, of all things, butter. The fourth tale is called simply “Rosie” and is about a very strange kind of air-raid shelter. My only disappointment with this book was that none of the LIBER KAOS BY PETER J. CARROLL And so, my quest to understand magical theory continues with another volume on Chaos Magic. I gained a great deal of insight and clarity from Carroll's prior book, Liber Null & Psychonaut. The present work under review, published five years later, has turned out to be not so valuable. We begin with heady material onRICHARD DAWKINS
The second half of the book is mostly concerned with slamming religion as a force for evil. Much of what Dawkins says is true, and a torch should definitely be shone on it all. The trouble is, the Christian is not overly concerned with the atrocities done by others, or the horrors done in the past in the name of Christ. BLADE RUNNER 2: THE EDGE OF HUMAN BY K.W. JETER The 1982 film Blade Runner was based on an earlier novel by Philip K. Dick entitled Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?. That novel is much quirkier and more upbeat than the dystopian movie adaptation by Ridley Scott. The plot is also significantly different, if I remember correctly. My first question, then, on approaching this PHILOSOPHY IN THE BEDROOM BY THE MARQUIS DE SADE While everyone's feeling naughty for reading E.L. James's 50 Shades of Grey these days, I thought I would instead delve into something by the man who gave sadism its name. My fascination with reading Philosophy in the Bedroom actually stems from the fact that I've got a THE NEW EVIDENCE THAT DEMANDS A VERDICT BY JOSH MCDOWELL Josh McDowell’s book, The New Evidence that Demands a Verdict, is written for such conscientious students, who wish to be able to hold a rational case for their faith when under fire from sceptics. The book also serves as a great information source for anyone, whether sceptic or believer, who wishes to become more informed about Christianity. MICHELLE REMEMBERS BY MICHELLE SMITH & LAWRENCE PAZDER The first book ever to be written on the subject of satanic ritual abuse (SRA) was Michelle Remembers in 1980, co-written by Michelle Smith and her psychiatrist Lawrence Pazder. Over a period of one year, Pazder records hundreds of sessions where Smith allegedly recovers repressed memories of herself as a five-year-old undergoing aprolonged period
DARRYL'S LIBRARY – BOOK REVIEWS OVER 200 BOOK REVIEWS BY DARRYL SLOANDecember 6, 2018
by Darryl
_GERALD’S GAME_ BY STEPHEN KING This novel, which is now well over two decades old, always fascinated me (for admittedly prurient reasons), but for some reason I never got around to reading it until now. What finally got me moving was learning that Netflix was producing a film version. I knew I would probably get around to seeing that, which would spoil the story. And original novels tend to be better than their adaptations. The story concerns a middle-aged couple who head off to their private summer house to try and inject some passion back into their marriage. Gerald handcuffs his wife Jessie to the bedposts, with her permission (something that probably seemed a lot racier in the 1990s than it does now). Unfortunately he dies, leaving Jessie confined and alone, withno hope of rescue.
None of the above is much of a spoiler, as the majority of the story takes place with Jessie in cuffs. You might wonder how the author could maintain the reader’s interest, with so little actually happening. Well, there are some things that do physically occur in the bedroom, but the bulk of the action takes place inside Jessie’s head. Her emotions (panic, terror, despair) are described vividly and realistically. But we also take a journey into the past, where Jessie (aided by a part of her subconscious that she embodies as an old friend) revives some repressed memories of childhood trauma. Some criticisms. The first half of the novel drags. King is overly verbose in describing the psychological state of the protagonist, and at times I was impatient for something to happen. But ultimately the story finds its feet and comes to a satisfying conclusion. The one part that lacked realism for me was the memory block. Child abuse is never to be taken lightly, but there are real children who suffer far greater things than Jessie, who carry those memories throughout their lives. In reality, it takes a lot for a child to remove an event from conscious awareness. King makes a huge melodramatic leap here, for the sake of getting his story from A to B, and it feels false. Overall, _Gerald’s Game_ is a worthwhile read. The Netflix movie is a faithful adaptation that does justice to the original novel (which you should read first).Advertisements
Report this ad Posted in 1990-99,
General Fiction
,
Stephen King
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March 24, 2018
by Darryl
_THE GENTLEMAN DOWNSTAIRS_ BY R. SMITH The full title of the book is The Gentleman Downstairs and Other Satanic Parables and Fables. It contains 67 stories, each one short enough to fit on a single page, each one illustrating an aspect of the philosophy of the Chruch of Satan. The book is meticulously annotated with references to literature written by the church’s founder, Anton LaVey,
as well as his successors, Blanche Barton and Peter H. Gilmore.
The references are explicit right down to the page numbers. LaVey’s book _The Satanic Witch_ (which I feel is one of his best) is mysteriously omitted from the canon. A little disappointing, as it’s the sort of book that would lend itself to colourful illustration, given that it’s about women’s powers of seduction. As a free-thinker, I have a significant rapport with satanic philosophy, so I delved into R. Smith’s book with great interest. Some of the parables are set in an apartment building, where an enigmatic character known as the Gentleman Downstairs lives on the bottom floor. Other parables were set further afield in space and time. While some stories were forgettable, others really stuck in the mind. I was surprised and delighted to encounter a story about a man who cycles to work every day regardless of the weather. Almost no one does that, but it just so happens that I do! I never thought of it as pertinent to Satanism before. > On the coldest day the man bicycled to work. He arrived at work > shivering with frost on his beard. But like every daily ride, he > felt more alive than if he hadn’t taken the bicycle. Coworkers > regarded him with incredulity. They didn’t understand the > transformation the ride brought about in the man. _The Gentleman Downstairs_ has been designed with an aesthetic in keeping with LaVey’s _The Satanic Bible_,
so that it will look right at home on the bookshelf beside it. While great care has been taken with the presentation, inside and out, my only quibble is that an exceptionally small font size was chosen for the text, to ensure that no story would take more than one page. A little hard on the eyes, but it’s is a small quibble. Parables were Jesus’ way of teaching his disciples important lessons about life through allegory. It’s a wonder nobody has thought of doing the same for Satanism until now. And intertaining and insightful read that I’m sure I will return to in the future. To sample some of the parables, visit the offical website: www.satanicparables.com.
Posted in Occult
, R.
Smith
,
Religion & SpiritualityTagged Satanism
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March 23, 2018
by Darryl
_THE MISSIONARY POSITION_ BY CHRISTOPHER HITCHENS Notorious atheist Christopher Hitchens has written this short volume, subtitled “Mother Teresa in Theory and Practice” as a critique of the enigmatic Catholic nun that everyone knows so well – or do they? My opinion of Mother Teresa, prior to reading this book, was stereotypically positive, informed only by the TV news. I don’t like Christianity, but regardless of one’s religion (or lack thereof), it is possible to live a life of selfless devotion to others. Few of us choose that path, but if anyone shines brightly in this regard, it’s got to be Mother Teresa, right? Wrong. Hitchens shows how Mother Teresa’s fame began with a documentary made about her Calcutta orphanage – the director insisting that he had captured the first ever miracle on camera. This miracle was the strange quality of the light within the building, which the director believed could not be explained naturally. The media ran with this, giving birth to a legend. The cameraman, who attributed the “miracle” to the quality of the new Kodak film, hadno impact.
Hitchens, with painstaking research, unearths records of people who have visited Mother Teresa’s “House for the Dying.” We find a woman who, instead of attempting to improve the lives of “the poorest of the poor”, is interested first and foremost in the advancement of a religious view that makes a virtue out of suffering. While millions of dollars in donations lie dormant in accounts, she insists on maintaining strictly ascetic living conditions, not only for the nuns of her order, but for all her patients. Dying men are not allowed a simple comfort like watching TV or receiving visitors. People languish in pain without freely available painkillers. There was a particularly horrific case of a fifteen-year-old whose life could have been saved if he had been taken to hospital to receive proper medical care, but this was not permitted. “They would all want it,” was the excuse. Meanwhile Mother Teresa is immune to criticism from a media that fails to inquire deeply enough. Her actions are judged by her reputation, rather than her reputation being judged by her actions. Instead of being a compassionate person, she is motivated first and foremost by the advancement of her religious order. It’s hard to argue against Hitchens’ dark depiction. From now on, when I think of the word “humanitarian,” it won’t be Mother Teresa’s face that comes to mind.Posted in 1990-99
,
Biographies
,
Christopher Hitchens,
Religion & Spirituality,
Uncategorized
Tagged atheism ,
Christianity ,
Mother Teresa
, religion
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March 4, 2016
by Darryl
_THE ESSENTIAL JUNG_ BY CARL G. JUNG (EDITED BY ANTHONY STORR) Carl Jung, who is known for an approach to psychology known as psychoanalysis, was a very prolific writer. It would be nearly impossible for the interested reader to collect every volume he wrote, so Anthony Storr has put together this 400-page compendium of excerpts in an attempt to give the reader a comprehensive overview of Jung’s concepts. Some of these are: the idea of the unconscious, archetypes, and dream analysis. I won’t kid you; I found this a difficult book, so difficult that my reading time spanned several years. Many of Jung’s ideas seem wildly abstract and speculative. However, there is definitely something interesting here, at least in part. Jung coined the term “unconscious,” recognising that our minds contain information that we are not always aware of. This is undoubtedly true from experience. He also uses the term “collective unconscious.” This is sometimes misunderstood as a unified consciousness (in a mystical, metaphysical sense), but what Jung really meant was that our minds contain inherited information from the past – such as our natural fear of fierce animals. The common childhood fear of monsters may have its roots in our hunter-gatherer ancestors’ very real conflicts with wild beasts. This fear is collective in the sense that we all inherited it. Jung intended nothing spiritual or paranormal by the term “collectiveunconscious.”
Related to the collective unconscious is the idea of “archetypes” – recurring images in dreams that can be spotted across a multiplicity of cultures, hinting again at the notion of a collective inheritance. Jung named certain archetypes as anima, animus and the shadow. I found a lot of this material confusing, because I can find very little correspondence in my own experience. I do like the idea of the shadow, as a way of identifying the unsavoury aspects of our personality that we try to repress because they’re socially unacceptable. I can relate to that. But it’s important to realise that the shadow is not a _thing_, not an entity – just an idea, a way of representing an aspect of human experience in language. In man’s more primal prehistory, he probably wouldn’t have had a shadow, because he would have been more at one with his natural instincts, without the pressure of civilisation’s often unnaturalideals on his head.
Jung puts a lot of stock on dream interpretation – in therapy, using dreams as signposts to the root of a personality problem. From personal experience, I would say this can sometimes be the case, but more often than not my dreams are full of playful nonsense. How does a therapist avoid placing massive significance in an aspect of a dream that might be completely random? Jung is essentially a mythologist of the psyche, in the way that ancient man was a mythologist about the material world – inventing a pantheon of gods and goddesses behind the forces of nature. Some of the words invented by Jung (such as unconscious, introvert, extravert) are still in common use today, which is a testament to his insight. Although this is a useful book, for me personally it was one that I had to laboriously dig through to find the nuggets of gold.Posted in 1990-99
,
Carl G. Jung
,
Psychology
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Uncategorized
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February 24, 2016
by Darryl
_SLAUGHTERHOUSE-FIVE_ BY KURT VONNEGUT I started reading this novel because of its status as a classic, but I must confess I knew nothing about its theme. As the story got underway, I had the distinct feeling that this was going to be a thoroughly depressing tale about reflections on the horror of war. Not my cup of tea. Imagine my surprise when the story made a weird tangent into _Twilight Zone_ territory. The narrator, Billy Pilgrim, becomes unstuck in time. What I mean is, one second he could be in the trenches of World War II, and the next he could be cuddling up to the woman he married after the war. Two days after that, he could be on exhibit in an extraterrestrial zoo, where he spent some time after being abducted by aliens. Then he might be back in the war. He has no control over what point in time his consciousness leaps into, or when these jumps are going to occur, but his weird condition gives him a perspective on time that allows him to see “the present” as more than just a single knife-edge that exists at only one point in time and is always racing forward. His alien captors, the Tralfamadorians, live in four dimensions all at once, seeing every moment of time as the present. When events happen, good or bad, their reaction is always “So it goes.” _Slaughterhouse-Five_ is a war story, an absurdist science fiction tale, and also an entertaining philosophy text on the nature of time – which might not be everyone’s cup of tea, but is definitely mine. As someone interested in esoteric knowledge, I had my own eureka moment about time a few years ago. It’s a real delight when I’m reading a story and the author lets me know that we’re both privy to a life-enriching secret: the idea that no matter _when_ you are in time, you’re always in the present.Posted in 1960-69
,
Kurt Vonnegut
,
Science Fiction
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Uncategorized
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January 21, 2016
by Darryl
_WHY I AM NOT A CHRISTIAN_ BY BERTRAND RUSSELL This volume brings together a collection of speeches and essays by the famous philosopher Bertrand Russell. They are all, directly or indirectly, about the topic of religion. In the titular essay, the author explains his reasons for being unconvinced by Christianity. In contrast to the typical view that Jesus was a good man but not the Messiah, Russell has no qualms about suggesting that he is not as good or as wise as we often make him out to be. He provides some compelling examples from the gospels, and makes an interesting comparison between the characters of Jesus, Socrates and Buddha, with Jesus seeming rather crude by comparison. The lecture touches on the themes of what it means to be a Christian; the “first cause” argument for God’s existence; the natural law argument; the argument from design; moral arguments for deity; the remedying of injustice; the character of Jesus and defects in his teaching; how churches hinder progress; how religion uses fear. It’s a good lecture, uncompromising and informative. The only misstep, I felt, was Russell’s suggestion that Jesus may not have existed atall.
The main problem with Russell’s speech is that it doesn’t go deep enough. As an ex-Christian, I recognise that the primary mistake at the heart of religion is the erroneous notion that mankind is defective and in need of some kind of redemption. When you put in the time and effort to understand your own nature, and nature itself, then religion’s entire sales pitch evaporates. Essentially, my answer to the question “Why are you not a Christian?” is “Because I am not broken.” Religion is based upon a profound misdiagnosis of the humancondition.
The titular speech is the high point of Russell’s book. The other chapters are variable in quality. The more interesting ones were those where Russell talks about sexuality; he was daringly forward-thinking for the time in which he spoke. Overall, I have to report that I’m a little disappointed. It’s not that this is a bad book. Just that I was hoping to be blown away by it, given the author’s reputation as a philosopher. I found myself wincing at times at the manner in which Russell occasionally makes overly dramatic accusations which appear to be more emotional than rational. An interesting read, but not an essential addition to mylibrary.
Posted in 1950-59
,
Bertrand Russell
,
Philosophy
,
Religion & Spirituality5 Comments
December 5, 2015
by Darryl
_PHILOSOPHY IN THE BEDROOM_ BY THE MARQUIS DE SADE __While everyone’s feeling naughty for reading E.L. James’s _50 Shades of Grey_ these days, I thought I would instead delve into something by the man who gave sadism its name. My fascination with reading _Philosophy in the Bedroom_ actually stems from the fact that I’ve got a soft spot for an old Jess Franco movie called _Eugenie_, starring the gorgeous Maria Rohm. According to the film’s opening credits, it’s based on the de Sade book here under review. The story is simple: a rich and powerful woman, Madame de Saint Ange, with her brother, Le Chevalier de Mirval, take a naive teenage girl, Eugenie, under their wing and proceed to give her an “education” in the ways of being a libertine, over the course of a weekend. While Franco’s movie does little more than tease the viewer, the original work is quite a different beast. The book is written in the form of a play, consisting entirely of dialogue – except for occasional stage directions about sexual positions, which came across as unintentionally comedic. I couldn’t imagine this actually taking place with actors, and I doubt it was ever made real in that fashion. However, I couldn’t help but visualise the actors from Franco’s adaptation in their respective roles. I use the word adaptation loosely, because Franco essentially did his own thing. Trust me, if he followed de Sade’s script, he would’ve been jailed. I’m not easily shocked when it comes to sexual content, but I have to admit that I was surprised at the extremes depicted by the author. I won’t go into detail, but I simply had no idea that many of de Sade’s sexual kinks had even entered the imagination of man three centuries ago. I was under the impression that the excesses depicted in modern pornography were largely a product of modern pornography. Not so, it seems. They were here all along. Parts of the book are actually very intelligent. There is a lengthy non-erotic portion concerned with libertine politics, which was rather boring for me. But I thoroughly enjoyed de Sade’s rant against Christianity. It was strikingly blasphemous for the time period, displaying a remarkable courage in a heavily Christianised society. Central to de Sade’s philosophy is an appeal to nature. He views man, rightly, as a part of nature, not as a thing alienated from nature, as religion teaches. Man is not a creature that has to beat his natural instincts into submission in pursuit of some “higher” ideal. The passions of man have every right to be expressed and enjoyed without guilt, because man is an animal. Arguing thus, de Sade is well ahead of his time. It wasn’t until Charles Darwin proposed the theory of natural selection in the mid-1800s that we were able to scientifically defend what de Sade already saw clearly. Sadly, the author is unable to separate his ideas about nature from his own personal sexual neuroses. To him, every thought that excites him, no matter how deranged, is natural. It looks like the old cliche about genius and insanity being very close companions. The erotic element of the story, frankly, does get tiresome after a while, and I almost gave up reading halfway through. I did like the philosophical side, though. How do I sum up the Marquis de Sade? Deranged genius? Maybe.Posted in < 1800
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Classics
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Marquis de Sade
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