
Aleister Crowley
Aleister Crowley was a highly influential, albeit controversial, English occultist and ceremonial magician. He is most famous for authoring "The Book of the Law" (1904), the foundational text of Thelema. Crowley also wrote "The Book of Lies" (1913) and numerous other works on magic, religion, and philosophy, shaping modern occult thought.
Books by Aleister Crowley
2 books available

The Book of the Law
by Aleister Crowley
3.9(3,921)
This book, allegedly dictated in Cairo, presents a spiritual manifesto. It challenges conventional morality with the decree 'Do what thou wilt,' which forms the basis for Aleister Crowley's philosophy of Thelema.

The Book of Lies
by Aleister Crowley
3.9(2,492)
A collection of cryptic poems, bizarre rituals, and qabalistic riddles, penned by Aleister Crowley, guiding readers through 93 pages of esoteric thought.