The lurid cover and its amateurish typography left me unprepared for the content: well-written, articulate, with a nice blend of scholarship, humour, and frank language.
The authors provide a list of references without connecting them to the text by citations. Considering the complexity and density of the content, probably a wise decision, but this reader was left wondering, time and again, 'where on earth did they pick up that piece of information?'
The book is divided, chronologically and logically, into several sections. The first gives a broad historical overview of the 'sinister' left-hand path of sex magic, focusing on its roots in ancient India. Another section covers the appearance, suppression and resurgence of the left-hand path in the West. The authors devote considerable space to biographies of some of the leading figures in the resurgence; material that was, for me, eye-opening. The latter part of the book turns to the practice of sex magic with useful, but perhaps fairly predictable, advice on single, dual, and group workings.
The last and least convincing section is a lengthy and unbalanced treatise on the use of S&M and BDSM as an aid to sex magic.
The authors have an unfortunate tendency to repeat themselves. Perhaps this was a deliberate didactic choice, but it raised a suspicion that the book was put together from lectures delivered to different audiences at different times, or that it was written over a prolonged period of time, long enough for the authors to forget what they had already written.
Having defined the left-hand path as a process of self-deification, with or without the assistance of a partner, the comparatively long and detailed examinations of orgies and BDSM (especially the latter) seem to contradict the core thesis. The authors themselves are aware of this contradiction, occasionally apologising for what might appear to be an inconsistency, then returning enthusiastically to further exposition of the contradiction. By the time they deliver advice on the preparation and furnishing of BDSM dungeons, at least one reader felt that they had wandered away into areas of personal interest.
This book is a definite keeper, well worth a second or third reading. As a manual of do-it-yourself sex magic it leaves much to be desired, presenting little more than sensible advice and a glimpse of possibilities awaiting the seeker. As a comprehensive review of the subject-matter it succeeds admirably -- at least from the point of view of someone unfamiliar with the history, psychology, philosophy, and even neurology of the left-hand path.