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Here's hoping it's the first of many more to follow.


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Myth: A Very Short Introduction;
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; and
These are just some that are available. I've read the first three in hard copy; but not the last three.


Mr Crowley actually wrote a review of the book when it was published, and signed it Oliver Haddo, the name of his character in the book.

Read this ages ago and it's slowly working it's way pack to the top of a TBR pile of novels...
Didn't know about AC reviewing it...I assume he did it with tongue in cheek?

The review was in Vanity Fair - it might be fun to try to find it - it's only briefly mentioned on the Wiki page for the book.

Just finished this one, and feel that reading rather than listening might have have given me a different impression. I think perhaps that the dramatic style of the Librivox reading may have prompted my earlier comments...
I like listening. Just became a libravox volunteer. Haven't worked on a project yet. I get a kind of dyslexia at times. Non-fiction easier to read than fiction. I live with Traumatic Brain Injury since 2004. It effects my right brain skills as well as some executive functioning.

I've enjoyed listening to the Narnia series as well as some creepy stuff by Lovecraft. I have a small collection in the back seat of my car and having some pagan stuff mixed in would be nice. I do enjoy diversity in things.

by Harrison Ainsworth
by George Macdonald
by Rabindranath Tagore
by Thomas Alfred Spalding
Anonymous
by C.W. Leadbeater
by The Three Initiates
by William Matthew Flinders Petrie
by Aleister Crowley
by William Blake
by Arthur Machen
by Arthur Machen
by Arthur Machen
I'll try and add others as I find them... :)
Books mentioned in this topic
The Black Toad (other topics)DruidCraft (other topics)
Traditional Witchcraft: A Cornish Book of Ways (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Gemma Gary (other topics)Philip Carr-Gomm (other topics)
Given the increase of books being published in ebook format, I would have thought there might be an increase in audio offerings. Not so.
Sometimes I wonder how blind pagans cope with finding materials when it seems so few pagan authors (of fiction and non-fiction) make their books available in audio format.
Do other members enjoy audio books?