Author:
Knight, Gareth
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Dion Fortune is recognized as one of the most influential figures in
twentieth century occultism and her books on various aspects of the occult
tradition are now enjoying a much deserved reappraisal. Her works of fiction are
highly acclaimed both as vehicles for presenting complex magical and psychical
theory and as remarkably powerful pieces of genre literature.
Gareth Knight, her biographer and a life long student of her work, here gives an
overview of all her occult fiction, including her early work, The Secrets of Dr
Taverner, a series of short stories based upon the approach of her early teacher
Dr Theodore Moriarty to methods of esoteric healing, and The Demon Lover, a
blood and thunder thriller of black magic and vampirism that developed in the
writing into a story of initiation and redemption through love.
In her later novels, Dion Fortune began deliberately to use fiction as a means
of practical teaching. While she had presented the theory of occultism in her
great work The Mystical Qabalah, it was through her works of fiction that she
sought to provide manuals for putting it into practice, at a time when much of
this material was considered highly secret and to be revealed to initiates only.
Gareth Knight gives a clear guide on how and where to look for this practical
instruction in these later books, which comprise The Goat-foot God, an evocation
of Earth Mysteries and the Rite of Pan; The Winged Bull with its polar Mysteries
of Sun and Earth; The Sea Priestess, celebrating the Mysteries of the Moon; and
the posthumously published Moon Magic that takes them to a higher arc with the
setting up of a temple dedicated to Isis.
Many aspects of occultism receive practical attention in her pages, including
place memories, karmic elements from past incarnations, animal magnetism, ley
lines, sacred centres, techniques of ritual, and above all the working out of
right elationships between the sexes in polar interchange.