Gnostic poet, painter, writer, and magician Aleister Crowley
arrived in Berlin on April 18, 1930. As prophet of his syncretic
religion "Thelema," he wanted to be among the leaders of art and
thought, and Berlin, the liberated future-gazing metropolis, wanted
him. There he would live, until his hurried departure on June 22,
1932, as Hitler was rapidly rising to power and the black curtain
of intolerance came down upon the city. Known to his friends
affectionately as "The Beast," Crowley saw the closing lights of
Berlin's artistic renaissance of the Weimar period when Berlin
played host to many of the world's most outstanding artists,
writers, filmmakers, performers, composers, architects,
philosophers, and scientists, including Albert Einstein, Bertolt
Brecht, Ethel Mannin, Otto Dix, Aldous Huxley, Jean Ross,
Christopher Isherwood, and many other luminaries of a glittering
world soon to be trampled into the mud by the global bloodbath of
World War II. Drawing on previously unpublished letters and diary
material by Crowley, Tobias Churton examines Crowley's years in
Berlin and his intense focus on his art, his work as a spy for
British Intelligence, his colorful love life and sex magick
exploits, and his contacts with German Theosophy, Freemasonry, and
magical orders. He recounts the fates of Crowley's colleagues under
the Nazis as well as what happened to Crowley's lost art
exhibition--six crates of paintings left behind in Germany as the
Gestapo was closing in. Revealing the real Crowley long hidden from
the historical record, Churton presents "the Beast" anew in all his
ambiguous and, for some, terrifying glory, at a blazing, seminal
moment in the history of the world.
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