Crowley is a bit like Nietzsche, in that his ideas and philosophies have been brandished by anarchists & fascists alike.
He had an
enormous ego, and was certainly a wizard when it came to self-promotion. His attitude towards women and non-European races was not enlightened, and he was quite happy to exploit them for his own benefit.
His style of magick is thoroughly High Ceremony Pomp & Circumstance.
What to read? I recommend starting with his final book,
Magick Without Tears, a collection of highly readable letters in which he straightforwardly explains his understanding of a variety of magickal topics. Minimal bullshit.
His autobiography,
The Confessions of Aleister Crowley, would be a reasonable next-step from there.
I think that Aleister functions mainly as a stepping-stone to bigger and better things. He is a key figure in the history of Western occultism, and made many important contributions, but his work has been improved and updated.
Austin Osman Spare, an artist and the progenitor of Chaos Magick, is a much less-known but far more interesting character; he & Crowley were friends until Spare became disgusted with Crowley's self-aggrandizing charades, commenting
Quote:Others praise ceremonial Magic, and are supposed to suffer much Ecstasy! Our asylums are crowded, the stage is over-run! Is it by symbolising we become the symbolised? Were I to crown myself King, should I be King? Rather should I be an object of disgust or pity. These Magicians, whose insincerity is their safety, are but the unemployed dandies of the Brothels.
Crowley in return dubbed Spare a 'black magician' (which doesn't seem like much of an insult coming from the man who proclaimed himself 'The Great Beast 666'
.
Spare's writing is more dense and abstruse, but often more fertile as well. He also developed the Sigil technique, which has become a standard entry-level 'Chaos Magick 101' practice.
You can find some of his writings
here. And have a search around the web for his astonishing artwork !