
The "novice"-level material is laid out with basic instructions, but there is little of the hand-holding that you tend to find in real beginner books. It should be kept in mind that this is not a "novice" level book, despite the subtitle. will work fine - and actually doing them will put you head and shoulders above about 90% of the people out there who claim to be magicians but in fact do little to no work. While I recommend a slightly different sequence of rituals based on my operant field model, the practices outlined by W.I.T. It's not a discipline where you can read a few books and then go around proclaiming yourself an expert without ever casting a spell or maintaining a daily ritual practice, which I've seen all too many people do. It is not really new material, but I've seen few books that outline the practices so concisely or make it as clear that there really is quite a bit of work involved in being a magician. The most valuable material in the early chapters is the set of recommended practices for both beginning and more advanced magical practitioners. If you already know this material, you can skip ahead.

is laying out the magical language that is necessary to understand the more complex rituals later in the book. But basically what is going on here is that W.I.T. It seems like a bit of a contradiction, though I've seen this sort of thing before, like with Jason Newcomb's introduction to the Goetia subtitled "A Simple Advanced Key." If it's simple, what's advanced about it? Furthermore, as I read through the early chapters of the book it pretty much felt like everything I was reading was material that I'd seen before - basic Golden Dawn rituals, Timothy Leary's eight-circuit model, the Qabalah, and so forth.

#Books with enochian chess manual
The book is subtitled "A Manual of Theory, Training, and Practice for the Novice and the Adept." My first question was why an "advanced" book would include "novice" level material. I wound up really enjoying the book, but there are a couple of things that put me off at first glance.

Entitled Advanced Enochian Magick, it is now available from Outskirts Press. Now Frater W.I.T., author of Enochian Initiation, has published a new similarly-titled book that is a real improvement over Schuler's failed effort. And yes, I started out working with Schueler's books, so I did try them out. The book included some more complex rituals in the back which, I have to say, for the most part did not work. The "Advanced" book consisted mostly of a recounting of Aleister Crowley's The Vision and the Voice along with Schueler's largely Theosophical interpretations of each aethyr vision. Schueler was one of the early authors to try and put together a set of books that would allow beginners to start practicing the Enochian magical system, but his work suffered from a number of significant flaws.

Years ago Gerald Schueler wrote a book for Llewellyn entitled An Advanced Guide to Enochian Magick as a followup to his first book, Enochian Magic.
