So this book can be divided into 3 parts: The Qabalah Intro, the Thelema refresher, and then lastly the Weird Experimental Shit.
The first part is a good overview of the Hermetic or Occult Qabalah. It might be a lil much for total newbies but once you got some other books under your belt this will be a breeze.
The Thelema Refresher is important mostly for the next section which is mostly made up by the appendix. If you’re new to Thelema, again, I recommend doing some preliminary research before tackling this part but even if you don’t, most of it will click fairly easily.
The Weird Experimental shit is when it gets fun 😏
So this is where Achad, a student of Aleister Crowley and an important figure in the development of Thelema as a whole, starts playing games with Gematria and the shape of the Hebrew alphabet. This takes the form of him completely reconstructing the correspondence for the pathways of the Qabalistic Tree of Life and the Major Arcana of the Tarot.
For the most part I was with him when he was mostly basing his changes on zodiacal and elemental that were pretty backed up by passages from The Book of the Law. Towards the end though is playing with the numbers and shapes of the letters and words starts getting really out and isn’t a common thing seen in Qabalah. His breaking down of the Hebrew letters to their core shapes is something mostly often only seen on the traditional Kabbalah, that which holds true to the system’s Jewish origins. But even then, his justifications start getting more and more obtuse but I wouldn’t call them entirely incorrect either.
In the end, I’m excited to read his next book where he takes this idea of a reworked Tree further and I’m definitely curious to see how this all plays out in the development of the New Aeon English Qaballa. All in all, a good and interesting read