THE OCCULT REVIEW - Vol 41, 6 Issues 1925 - DIVINATION ATLANTIS MAGICK HAUNTINGS
THE OCCULT REVIEW - Vol 41, 6 Issues 1925 - DIVINATION ATLANTIS MAGICK HAUNTINGS
THE OCCULT REVIEW - Vol 41, 6 Issues 1925 - DIVINATION ATLANTIS MAGICK HAUNTINGS
THE OCCULT REVIEW - Vol 41, 6 Issues 1925 - DIVINATION ATLANTIS MAGICK HAUNTINGS
THE OCCULT REVIEW - Vol 41, 6 Issues 1925 - DIVINATION ATLANTIS MAGICK HAUNTINGS
THE OCCULT REVIEW - Vol 41, 6 Issues 1925 - DIVINATION ATLANTIS MAGICK HAUNTINGS
THE OCCULT REVIEW - Vol 41, 6 Issues 1925 - DIVINATION ATLANTIS MAGICK HAUNTINGS
THE OCCULT REVIEW - Vol 41, 6 Issues 1925 - DIVINATION ATLANTIS MAGICK HAUNTINGS
THE OCCULT REVIEW - Vol 41, 6 Issues 1925 - DIVINATION ATLANTIS MAGICK HAUNTINGS
THE OCCULT REVIEW - Vol 41, 6 Issues 1925 - DIVINATION ATLANTIS MAGICK HAUNTINGS
THE OCCULT REVIEW - Vol 41, 6 Issues 1925 - DIVINATION ATLANTIS MAGICK HAUNTINGS

THE OCCULT REVIEW - Vol 41, 6 Issues 1925 - DIVINATION ATLANTIS MAGICK HAUNTINGS

Regular price $395.00 Sale

THE OCCULT REVIEW: VOLUME 41, JANUARY - JUNE 1925


Book Details + Condition: William Rider & Son (London). Volume 41, 1925. First UK Editions of the highly influential and pre-eminent journal of the 20th century, THE OCCULT REVIEW. (The US editions were issued one month after the British.) This compilation spans January - June, 1925. Privately bound with green hardcover boards with gilt to spine. 406 pages; Illustrated. In like-new condition: while the issues were bound long ago, they show minimal wear, and have been on a collector's shelf. It doesn't appear as though they've even been cracked open. Firm binding; crisp boards; light normal toning to pages; and a clean interior. A true gem and an increasingly scarce first edition of occult literature, and a fascinating treasure-trove of knowledge, for occult and spiritualist collectors. Please see our other listings for more OCCULT REVIEW first edition volumes.

Edited by Ralph Shirley, THE OCCULT REVIEW contained essays on all aspects of occultism, from alchemy to witchcraft; there was emphasis on magic, as many of its authors had been members of the Golden Dawn or its offshoots. Most of the eminent occultists of the period contributed to the journal, such as Frater Achad, Arthur Avalon, Annie Besant, Theodore Besterman, J.W. Brodie-Innes; Hereward Carrington, Mabel Collins, Aleister Crowley, Dion Fortune, Ada Goodrich-Freer; Franz Hartmann, D.D. Home, E.J. Langford Garstin; Michael Juste; William Kingsland, G.R.S. Mead; Sylvan J. Muldoon, Elliot O'Donnell, H. Stanley Redgrove, Sax Rohmer; Eduoard Schure, Lewis Spence, Meredith Starr, Montague Summers, and A.E. Waite. In most cases, these articles are the first appearance of their work. In addition to essays, poems, artwork, and illustrations, each issue typically contained the editor's 'Notes of the Month,' letters from the public, book reviews, and advertisements. This compiled volume contains such articles as:

- Saint Francis and Christmas
- Haunted Houses
- Rational Mysticism
- Faith and the Fourth Dimension
- Lemuria (Lewis Spence)
- The Masonic Initiation
- The Great Pyramid
- The Divine Law of Human Being
- Astrology and the Unconscious
- Was Egypt the Source of Magic and Religion?
- Divination in the Old Testament
- The Sargasso Sea: Its Connection with Atlantis (Lewis Spence)
- Rudolf Steiner, A Study
- Occult Seals and Columns (Meredith Starr)
- The Druids (George Austin)
- Folklore and Occultism Among the Arabs (Theodore Besterman)
- And so much more.