Home :: Books :: Religion & Spirituality  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality

Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Tetragrammaton: The Secret to Evoking Angelic Powers and the Key to the Apocalypse (Llewellyn's High Magick Series)

Tetragrammaton: The Secret to Evoking Angelic Powers and the Key to the Apocalypse (Llewellyn's High Magick Series)

List Price: $19.95
Your Price:
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A fascinating key ...
Review: Arguably controversial,Donald Tyson's treatment of the Holy Name and its magical implications and ramifications,with an extended reference to Enochiana cannot but act as a catalyst of ideas.Indeed,this is an unparalleled extensive treatment of the topic,while the author payed attention to the modern implications of the subject approached in his unique learned and critical manner.Whether one agrees with his assumption that the Enochian Keys are apocalyptic in nature-an interesting proposition in itself- has very little relevance;the merit of this book lies rather in its compelling ability of making the reader think and further explore the subject.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A fascinating key ...
Review: Arguably controversial,Donald Tyson's treatment of the Holy Name and its magical implications and ramifications,with an extended reference to Enochiana cannot but act as a catalyst of ideas.Indeed,this is an unparalleled extensive treatment of the topic,while the author payed attention to the modern implications of the subject approached in his unique learned and critical manner.Whether one agrees with his assumption that the Enochian Keys are apocalyptic in nature-an interesting proposition in itself- has very little relevance;the merit of this book lies rather in its compelling ability of making the reader think and further explore the subject.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Fascinating new ideas for such an acient subject.
Review: I have personally read many books on Kabbalah, each a regurgitation of the one before. This book, however was fascinating and new. I do not feel that history holds all the keys to our future. I can not believe that the sages of long past knew all the answers to the great mysteries of the Universe. All to often we spend so much time with our nose in a book, reading someone restating the same old thing they read somewhere else, that we fail to actually lean and grow. Donald Tyson appears to be different. In this book he brings to light many new and exciting ideas that I have never seen before. Whether or not he is accurate, I have yet to see for myself, but at least I will have tried something new and learned from it. So, I would definitely recommend this book to anyone who is interested in the Devine Name, its meaning and uses. Especially to those who, like myself, crave understanding yet aren't afraid to step off the trodden path to find it.

-Jeremiah Wolfe

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Fascinating new ideas for such an acient subject.
Review: I have personally read many books on Kabbalah, each a regurgitation of the one before. This book, however was fascinating and new. I do not feel that history holds all the keys to our future. I can not believe that the sages of long past knew all the answers to the great mysteries of the Universe. All to often we spend so much time with our nose in a book, reading someone restating the same old thing they read somewhere else, that we fail to actually lean and grow. Donald Tyson appears to be different. In this book he brings to light many new and exciting ideas that I have never seen before. Whether or not he is accurate, I have yet to see for myself, but at least I will have tried something new and learned from it. So, I would definitely recommend this book to anyone who is interested in the Devine Name, its meaning and uses. Especially to those who, like myself, crave understanding yet aren't afraid to step off the trodden path to find it.

-Jeremiah Wolfe

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: A for effort...
Review: There is obviously no conclusion too high that Mr. Tyson cannot jump to it. I was intrigued when I found that Mr. Tyson had written another book with Enochian content as I had enjoyed his beginners guide to enochian very much. What I didn't realize was that there is a great gap between someone being able to summarize the work of others (as in the Beginner's Guide) and actually publishing an original thought. Mr. Tyson is obviously well read, but he fails to give any firm basis for wild theories that include the pivotal idea of the book which is that we should work magically for the destruction of our own universe and that that is the sole purpose of the Angelic calls or keys of Enochian Magick. It is no small wonder that Gerald Schueller gets Donald Tyson to write his introductions. They are two peas in a pod. While I truly believe Mr. Tyson writes more in earnest each of the two have been opportunistic in generating pulp about Enochian that will never further the science, only their bank accounts. This book is a stinker and proves once again what a skunk farm Llewellyn Publications is.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Interesting veiwpoint, but riding the fence
Review: Whereas I have found some dissapointing discoveries in many of Tyson's early works, this rides the fence. It is interesting to give the Enochian Aethyrs a veiw from a total Christian veiwpoint, but there is more than just Christianity lined within the Enochiana. Tyson is very Christian, and he makes this clear in a subtle way, and bases many of his opinions of general Occultism this way. I would not recommend this book to the beginner in Enochian Magick, but perhaps for someone who wants to look at it in a different veiw. As far as the Enochiana being the Keys to the Apocolypse...perhaps so, but I would not aim to attempting to release ol' 333...he might just burn the back of your neck!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Interesting veiwpoint, but riding the fence
Review: Whereas I have found some dissapointing discoveries in many of Tyson's early works, this rides the fence. It is interesting to give the Enochian Aethyrs a veiw from a total Christian veiwpoint, but there is more than just Christianity lined within the Enochiana. Tyson is very Christian, and he makes this clear in a subtle way, and bases many of his opinions of general Occultism this way. I would not recommend this book to the beginner in Enochian Magick, but perhaps for someone who wants to look at it in a different veiw. As far as the Enochiana being the Keys to the Apocolypse...perhaps so, but I would not aim to attempting to release ol' 333...he might just burn the back of your neck!


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates