This week, we finish William Sleator’s The Boy Who Reversed Himself. Please read from Chapter 10 through to the end, pages 69-167.
June 19th: The Boy Who Reversed Himself
For the next two weeks, we’ll be reading a deceptively simple, but brilliant, young adult novel about interdimensional travel. William Sleator’s The Boy Who Reversed Himself furnishes valuable interpretive tools for talking about the almost-possible, and how it manifests.
Please read Chapters 1-9 (through page 68) for Wednesday’s discussion.
June 12th: David Shoemaker on the Holy Guardian Angel
A video this week – posted most tardily, but hopefully of interest!
David Shoemaker’s talk, “The Thelemic Concept of the Holy Guardian Angel.”
Please come with three questions for the group to discuss. Or one Very Good Question.
June 5th: Short Stories by Ted Chiang
This week – a new suggestion from Saint Shut-the-Fuck-up-Friday: short stories from the collection Stories of Your Life and Others by Ted Chiang.
Please read at least one of these. Preferably two for the sake of wider discussion. All three if you’re enjoying yourself and/or feel ambitious. Our Saint has provided “tasting notes”:
Tower of Babylon—This is the shortest of the three selections. Tasting notes include wine, sweat, conflicting definitions of hubris, and fine-quality copper ingots.
Seventy-Two Letters—This is the longest of the three selections. Textural notes include rich clay under the fingernails; the prickle of the skin when science blurs into magic; the fragile onionskin of anarchist zines; porcelain still warm from your cup of tea.
Hell is the Absence of God—This one is middle-length, and when your Saint tried to write playful scent notes for it… they couldn’t. So they offer this: they’ve read this short story at three different spiritually-distinct points in their life and while it’s never stopped being horrifying, they observed a newfound sense of peace during this last reading that wasn’t present a decade earlier. (They consider this story a form of exposure therapy.) Your Saint doesn’t know if Chiang intended this piece as horror, but it’s one of the few pieces of literature they’ve read that managed to induce nausea. (For those who might benefit from such content warnings—discussion of suicide, death of a spouse, semi-graphic descriptions of injury. If you grew up in a particularly devout Christian context, this may stir up some long-dormant brain weasels.)
Further comments from Saint Shut-the-Fuck-Up-Friday:
If you’ve not read Ted Chiang previously, he’s often described as a spiritual successor to Borges. While your Saint (to their embarrassment) hasn’t read enough Borges to assess that opinion, they deeply enjoy how Chiang frequently places historical scientific theories and different pieces of theology into a mason jar and shakes that jar until they fight or fuck their way into leaving behind squalling, implacable Mysticism. (One might argue that religious texts—particularly etiological myths—are themselves an older attempt at scientific theory, and your Saint suspects we might get into that on Wednesday night!)
Reading for May 29th: Twilight of the Idols
This week, a few selections from Friedrich Nietzsche’s Twilight of the Idols. We’ll discuss the Preface (pp. 465-466), “‘Reason’ in Philosophy” (pp. 479-484), “How the ‘True World’ Finally Became a Fable” (pp. 485-486), “The Four Great Errors” (pp. 492-501), and a smattering of the “Skirmishes of an Untimely Man” (begins p. 513): No.s 17, 18, 25, 26, 28, 34, and 43. Remember to scroll down and click ‘PDF’ under ‘Download Options’. Until Wednesday!
May 22nd: Yellow Magic
This Wednesday – the first-ever recommendation from Fra. Alkahest: Real Magic: An Introductory Treatise on the Basic Principles of Yellow Magic by Philip Emmons Iassac Bonewits. Fra. Alkahest invites us to read Chapter 1, “The Laws of Magic,” pages 1-17, and Chapter 7, “The Fundamental Patterns of Ritual,” pages 147-176.
May 15th: The Magician’s Companion
This week, Sorcerix Helios recommends The Magician’s Companion: A Practical and Encyclopedic Guide to Magical and Religious Symbolism by Bill Whitcomb. Give it a couple of minutes to download; it is a whole encyclopedia!
Helios requests that we read the “What is Magic” section, pages 3-38,
Reading for May 8th: The Last Unicorn, pt. 3
On Wednesday we’ll discuss the conclusion to Peter S. Beagle’s The Last Unicorn, pp. 168-248 (Ch. XI -XIV), and it will be so lovely! Hope to see you there.
Reading for May 1st: The Last Unicorn, pt. 2
Pressing forward with The Last Unicorn next week. We’ll go from Ch. VII-X (pp. 95-167). Remember to scroll down and click ‘PDF’ under ‘Download Options’ to get the file. See ya!
Reading for April 24th: The Last Unicorn
This week we’re looking at Peter S. Beagle’s The Last Unicorn, beginning with chapters I-VI (pp. 1-94). Don’t let the page count scare you, it goes down easy. I also can’t link directly to the file this week, so just scroll down a bit on the archive.org page and click ‘PDF’ under ‘Download Options’. See ya Wednesday!