... a rather esoteric treatise on human spiritual energy centers. It somewhat contradicts (or shows up?) all the other writings I've read on the subject. Does it matter?
I'm not sure this is a worthwhile read. The author's own ideas and observations--of chakra colors, functions, and relationships--are interesting at least. He writes with apparent authority, in his 1927 prose. The contradictions to other more recent teachings make me wonder... Perhaps these contradictions are irrelevant in a New-Agey kind of way. I can buy that, I guess, although not without the some expense of my convictions that this spiritual science is definitely valid.
Leadbeater concludes with an extensive discussion of the Hindu knowledge of the chakras, and some about how they are used in meditation, and to awaken kundalini. It's somewhat hard to follow, and it struggles to hold relevance I think, for the average reader anyway. (The book made me feel very much like the average reader, say what that may about it.)
I continue to be interested and intrigued, regardless, and in the long run I won't stop researching, comparing, and experimenting in my own practice. One thing can definitely be said for this book; it does foster intrigue with the topic.