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The reputed home of the Queen of Sheba, Yemen has been at the
crossroads of Africa, the Middle East and Asia for thousands of
years thanks to its position on the ancient spice routes. Ten
thousand years of trade along Yemen's Red Sea and Indian Ocean
coasts, over its mountains and across its deserts made it a meeting
point of people, ideas, money and goods and the centuries of
trading generated much wealth. There has been a British presence in
Yemen ever since the early 1600s when the East India Company set up
trading posts in Mukha (Mocha in the west), a port then famous as
the world centre for trade in coffee. In 1839 the port city of Aden
was captured to provide a base to protect British trade routes.
This began an even stronger relationship which would last some 130
years until 1967 when the Britain finally pulled out, having
granted independence after several years of insurgency against
British rule including riots and attacks on its troops.But
Britain's links do not end there. Yemen is the mother country of
the longest-established of Britain's Muslim communities. Yemenis
came to Britain from the 1890s onwards, many as an indirect result
of having joined the British Merchant Navy, and after World War Two
there was further emigration. By the mid-1970s there were some
15,000 Yemenis in Britain, though today this figure has shrunk back
considerably. One of the poorest countries in the region, Yemen
still maintains much of its tribal character and old ways. People
wear traditional dress and the custom of chewing the narcotic plant
khat in the afternoons is still widely observed. Yemen remains a
country of great mystery and in recent years it has attracted the
curiosity of a growing number of the more adventurous tourists.
Timothy d'Arch Smith is a well-known bibliographer, reviewer and
antiquarian bookseller with a special interest in the by-ways of
literature, notably the occult and the curious. For Aleister
Crowley a book was a talisman and their every part right down to
colour, dimension, and price was symbolic. He also used magical
techniques to gain literary success--thus new editions of Crowley's
writing multiply daily, tantalizing the bibliographer. All the more
indispensable is this authoritative guide to his magical first
editions. Timothy d'Arch Smith, widely acknowledged as a leading
expert on Crowley and on underground literature, offers several
shorter articles on: *Oxford's demonologist Montague Summers; *R A
Caton and his Fortune Press; *Sexual prophet Ralph Chubb; *Florence
Farr; *The British Library Private Case; *and Timothy d'Arch Smith.
*For this new edition, he also adds an extra chapter on Crowley.
''...one could hardly wish for a more stimulating guide...'' -The
London Magazine ''One of the more immediately striking things about
the book is its gentle humour.'' - Time Out
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