John Symonds is a queer duck. A minor novelist, playwright, and writer of children's stories, Symonds befriended Crowley in 1946, a year before the latter's death, and declared his admiration for Crowley's unpublished book, Magick Without Tears. Symonds allowed Crowley to appoint him Assistant Grand Treasurer General of the O.T.O., a position which implies that Symonds accepted Crowley's "Law of Thelema," and Crowley in his last will and testament appointed him as his literary executor on behalf of the O.T.O. Symonds also acquired a number of Crowley artifacts and mss. after Crowley's death. However, five years after Crowley's death, Symonds began to publish a series of four biographies of Crowley, the present book being the last, all of which are notable for their highly personal, opinionated, biased, dismissive, disparaging, and vituperative treatment of Crowley's life and personality, including the repetition of doubtful stories based on hearsay, and, according to Crowley expert Gerald Yorke, a large number of factual inaccuracies. Symonds also published several of Crowley's works, along with Kenneth Grant, who Symonds recognized as the Outer Head of the O.T.O., on highly suspect grounds, for his own and Grant's financial benefit and personal advantage. The Beast 666: The Life of Aleister Crowley is the final revision of Symonds's biography of Crowley. Symonds's entertaining and well written biography is mainly interested in exposing Crowley's many failings as a writer, political activist, lover, husband, and human being, going into great detail concerning his many misadventures, personal failings, misogyny, duplicity, hypocrisy, and multiple drug addictions, but Symonds has very little interest in understanding Crowley's mystical and magical accomplishments, which were the raison d'etre of his life. As a result, the book comes across as rather petty and mean spirited. In particular, Symond's treatment of the Cairo Working (1904), during which Crowley channelled his famous prophecy of the 2oth century, and the Vision and the Voice (1909), his visions in the Sahara desert, is very cursory and superficial. He doesn't even mention Samuel Aiwaz Jacobs (1918)! Nevertheless, at 600 pages, The Beast 666 is an interesting treatment of a man who has become far more famous and successful after his death than Symonds himself - a fact which I suspect is what led Symonds to befriend Crowley in the first place. Although Tobias Churton's five volume biography of Crowley is far more balanced and thorough, Symond's book is still an important contribution to the expanding field of study of the life and works of Aleister Crowley.