If while questing for the Holy Grail, you have occasionally felt like falling down a rabbit hole, with Alice, the Merry Pranksters and Mdm. Blavatsky, well here's your chance. First, at 600+ pages "Looking For Arthur" is not for the casual reader. Secondly, a solid background in esoteric eastern literature (with a minor in western mysteries) is needed to understand that what's being conveyed (usually with running humorous overlay) is much more than Arthurian fantasies induced by too much Glastonbury grail tea.
So . . .If you have been able to connect with the ideas conveyed by writers like Israel Regardie and Dion Fortune, among others, then give "Looking for Arthur", a try, otherwise not.
So . . .If you have been able to connect with the ideas conveyed by writers like Israel Regardie and Dion Fortune, among others, then give "Looking for Arthur", a try, otherwise not.