I'm seeing a lot of positive reviews of this book here, so I guess it's up to me to Rebel.
Aunty Fomorian shakes her head with disappointment and winces in disgust. And cringes while talking about myself in third person.
It may as well be called “Left Hand Path For Dummies” written by your creepy boomer uncle who thinks he's funny, cool and a down-to-earth kinda guy. The book has endless lists, typos, woeful lack of references in-text and an inconsistent narrative style. The parts that are meant to be funny come across as cringeworthy & try-hard, and the parts that are meant to be serious and reverential are, well, impossible to take seriously. Many times it reads like a parody of Satanism (or Setianism), minus animal sacrifices and masturbation.
The author possesses none of the passion - the defiant fire of LHP. He writes with the same enthusiasm as an insurance salesman from The Truman Show, or a Jehovah's (or Set's) Witness: “Have you thought about the afterlife? Allow me to introduce the Prince of Darkness, the God of Isolate Intelligence!” (not an actual quote)
““It takes no training to be a jerk, there is no pride of accomplishment in one's jerk-hood. Let the ways of the brutes belong to the brutes, and those of philosopher kings belong to philosopher kings.” This passage in particular stinks of Fedora M'Lady Beta Male vibes. How can a grown man, at the highest rank in the Temple of Set, use the word "jerk-hood" in any context. I wouldn't even use it ironically.
The book is full of weird chanting, hissing, being naked in your room, sticking pieces of paper on your forehead, destroying property, spending money on random items, and self-identification with dozens of gods from different cultures and religions around the world. You are Kali, you are Odin, you are Uriel.
Here's a taste: “Say the words, "Ta Ta Te Te To Tie Te Te Tu" very pompously as though announcing the arrival of the Emperor.”
“Knock on the side of your head, as though knocking on a door. Knock seven times.”
(There are so many jokes that could be extracted from this sentence alone... The book is a joke that writes itself, though.)
If you have writing issues, sight issues, any kind of physical or speech disability – this book is a fuck you from the author. You can't do 99% of the rituals described. Imagine trying to say those passages and words if you have Tourette's. Or having to take off clothes for a ritual while you're bound to a wheelchair, and the effort it would take to explain to your aid/helper what you're doing. What if you have dyslexia and writing pages and pages into a diary every day is painful. The author doesn't provide alternatives, not even a suggestion like “hey, if you don't want to handwrite this, feel free to type it up on your computer or record audio”. Nothing like that. Not once. You might come up with your own ways, of course, but how could you be sure they'll work? How could you know whether or not the rituals provided can be altered?
The Temple of Set stinks of artificiality and historical revisionism.
Thing is, I am already familiar with this “type” of “literature”.
I actually have a real uncle who is in a cult. A Japanese New Age cult that is very RHP but I've read the books his “organization” publishes and there's very little difference between how they're presented, how they're explained – with this book. It's the patronizing tone that irks me the most. A patronizing tone that's also a sales pitch.
I would advise everyone before reading this: please, research Michael Aquino, the founder of the Temple of Set. I mean REALLY study Aquino, as well as the people he's been closely associated with. Most importantly, read the police reports, the investigations that were done on him from the 80s to the 90s. The actual transcripts and interviews. I don't want to say too much, but simply put, Michael Aquino is a really shady individual and using "mass hysteria about Satanism" excuse is just a weak shield to discourage Satanists and occultists themselves from looking closer at the facts presented. And he's got a clown for a spokesperson, clearly aimed at recruiting naïve 20-year olds.
There is no reason you should trust Don Webb, or this “Uncle Setnakt” he pretends to be. He's a high school teacher from rural Texas who writes fiction for a living. I don't trust Michael Aquino around children, and I wouldn't trust this guy, and the fact that Don sees himself as an "uncle" in itself is weird. Look - the Left Hand Path can be so quirky!
If you've actually done the rituals he told you to do, congrats, you've been played.
You're better off reading The Satanic Bible.
Or if you want a real book about LHP, “The Lords of the Left-Hand Path” by Stephen E. Flowers is perfect. It's (mostly) objective, well-researched, articulate, mature, and consistent. You'll actually feel like you're reading something written by a real occult scholar, not a creepy Uncle.