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John Symonds (1) (1914–2006)

Autor(a) de The Great Beast: The Life and Magick of Aleister Crowley

Para outros autores com o nome John Symonds, veja a página de desambiguação.

37+ Works 287 Membros 3 Reviews

Obras de John Symonds

Beast 666 (1988) — Autor — 30 cópias
Bezill (1962) 16 cópias
The Story George Told Me (1963) 7 cópias
The Hurt Runner (1968) 5 cópias
Prophecy and the Parasites (1973) 5 cópias
Letters from England (1975) 5 cópias
The Lady in the Tower (1955) 4 cópias
The Magic Currant Bun (1952) 4 cópias
The bright blue sky (1956) 3 cópias
Conversations with Gerald (1974) 3 cópias
Elfrida and the Pig (1959) 3 cópias
Light Over Water (1963) 3 cópias
The Shaven Head (1974) 3 cópias
The stuffed dog (1967) 3 cópias
The Only Thing That Matters (1960) 3 cópias
A Girl Among Poets (1957) 2 cópias
With a View on the Palace (1966) 2 cópias
The Child (1976) 2 cópias
Lottie (1957) 2 cópias
William Waste (1947) 2 cópias
Travelers three (1953) 1 exemplar(es)
Tom & Tabby 1 exemplar(es)
The isle of cats (1955) 1 exemplar(es)
Harold: The story of a friendship (1973) 1 exemplar(es)
Sidony (1987) 1 exemplar(es)
The Guardian of the Threshold (1980) 1 exemplar(es)
Zelide (1984) 1 exemplar(es)
Away to the Moon (1956) 1 exemplar(es)

Associated Works

Magick: Liber Aba : Book 4 (Magick Bk. 4) (2004) — Editor, algumas edições691 cópias
Moonchild (1929) — Editor, algumas edições653 cópias
The Confessions of Aleister Crowley: An Autohagioraphy (1929) — Editor, algumas edições511 cópias
Magical Record of the Beast 666 (1748) — Editor — 90 cópias
The Complete Astrological Writings (1974) — Editor — 75 cópias
The Bedside Lilliput (1950) — Contribuinte — 11 cópias

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Data de nascimento
1914-03-12
Data de falecimento
2006-10-21
Sexo
male
Nacionalidade
England
UK
Local de nascimento
Battersea, London, England, UK
Local de falecimento
London, England, UK
Locais de residência
London, England, UK
Educação
self-educated
Ocupação
journalist
biographer
novelist
playwright
children's book author

Membros

Resenhas

This is a shortened and modified version of the review I wrote in Mar 1994 after reading this as a bed-time story to my youngest son:

A wonderful new discovery, wonderfully old-fashioned. The combination of humor and sadness for Elfrida, a smart girl whose parents forbid her playing with dolls, and her amazing and exciting adventure visiting...dolls by flying on a...

You'll just have to read this book to find out more. Be warned, you will probably fall in love with it and sweet, insightful and compassionate Elfrida.… (mais)
½
 
Marcado
Bookish59 | Aug 31, 2015 |
Most extensive Crowley biography with much good detail, but somewhat too long.
½
 
Marcado
JayLivernois | Jun 25, 2012 |
This book was issued after the first edition of Symonds' original Crowley bio The Great Beast, and the later revised edition of The Great Beast claimed to include the contents of The Magic of AC. But that was only partially true. About 60% of The Magic consists of biographical material that Symonds had not included in The Great Beast, particularly drawn from Crowley's records of his major magical operations, such as "The Ab-ul-Diz Working" and "The Paris Working." These passages were later integrated with the main biography, as advertised. But this material is more reliably approached through the primary documents in The Equinox IV (2) (The Vision & the Voice, with Commentary and Other Papers), of course.

What serious students will find most interesting is the other 40% of Symonds' The Magic of AC, in which he describes the manner in which he ingratiated himself to the elderly Prophet of the Aeon. There is a curious repeated pattern, in which Crowley invites Symonds out to Netherwood, and Symonds brings along an uninvited guest as a companion. Symonds writes that "Crowley was someone to see and to talk about afterwards," as if the old magician were a stage play for his amusement. Despite his protestations that he found Crowley entertaining in a sort of pathetic way, it looks like Symonds was genuinely afraid of him. His poor wife Margaret certainly was, and the account of Symonds arm-twisting her into a visit makes for gruesome reading. After several visits with Crowley, having read The Book of the Law and The Equinox of the Gods which Crowley gave him as gifts, Symonds still doesn't seem to know the word Thelema, instead going on contemptuously about "Crowleyism" and "Crowleyanity." Symonds patently deceives Crowley into thinking that he is willing to help on such projects as a new Thelemic commune ("The Green Lion"), playing him along, rather than being honest with him. He whines about getting involved in the publication of Olla, when he volunteered to help. And then he treats his assignment as literary executor as a surprising stroke of luck, when his intention to write a saleable biography of Crowley had been declared to the reader (but not to Crowley) from the outset.

Symonds once accused Crowley of being a man with no superego or conscience of any kind. He often remarked how Crowley seemed utterly mystified by why other people should consider him evil. I rather think, after reading The Magic of Aleister Crowley, that the description better fits Symonds himself. He seems to have thought that readers would consider him fully justified in lying to an eccentric old man whom he intended to use as literary fodder. So today Symonds is an elderly author living in England. If only two wrongs could make a right....
… (mais)
1 vote
Marcado
paradoxosalpha | Jun 10, 2009 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
37
Also by
6
Membros
287
Popularidade
#81,379
Avaliação
3.9
Resenhas
3
ISBNs
44
Idiomas
3

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