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Cover of The Sun at Night

The Sun at Night

Roger Williamson (1989)

SubgenreSpace Opera
Age groupYA 12-17
Content ratingPG-13
Pages ()
Setting
Goodreads3.22

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ViolenceNot rated
Sexual contentNot rated
LanguageNot rated

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Synopsis

This is the tale of one man's struggle with the mundane world and his awakening to the powerful occult concepts which run beneath it.Neither an unadorned autobiographical story nor, a work of purely imaginative fiction, The Sun At Night offers philosophical truths within the context of a fictionalized dream narrative. The essence of the encounters with the occult undercurrents of the England of Williamson's birth are, however, real and form the backbone of the "teaching story" which has been called a classic of "the left hand path".The Sun At Night follows its protagonist from his early remembrances of his mother's tales of secret controlling powers behind the facade of the mundane world and into his encounters, involvement, and growth within the "Order of The Morning Star" of which she spoke.? The forms that this Order takes will resonate familiarly with any student of western occultism and even the uninformed reader will be gripped by the descriptions of the "immortals" whose workings continually shape the unseen levels of the world.