RAWIllumination.net
Robert Anton Wilson and Robert Shea. Blog, Internet resources, online reading groups, articles and interviews, Illuminatus! info.
Sunday, September 14, 2025
Saturday, September 13, 2025
Michael Johnson's book reviews
Michael Johnson's latest Overweening Generalist Substack episode, "Book Reviews on Acid." , is a roundup of reviews of three books: Blotter: The Untold Story of an Acid Medium by Erik Davis; The Acid Queen: The Psychedelic Life and Counterculture Rebellion of Rosemary Woodruff Leary by Susannah Cahalan and Tripped: Nazi Germany, the CIA, and the Dawn of the Psychedelic Age by Norman Ohler.
The reviews are well-written and Michael brings considerable knowledge of his own to bear; these reviews would not be out of place in a slick magazine or the New York Times book review section, but we get to read them in a Substack sent out as an email (or if you prefer, at the website or in your smartphone app.) If you haven't checked out Michael's newsletter, this would be one place to start.
The book on Rosemary Woodruff Leary is not a flattering portrait of Timothy Leary, as other reviewers of the book have noted; I thought Michael handled it well.
Friday, September 12, 2025
RAW biography now available in Spanish
Here is something interesting: the RAW biography, Chapel Perilous: The Life and Thought Crimes of Robert Anton Wilson, by Gabriel Kennedy, is now available in Spanish. Details here. Aurora Dorada (e.g., "Golden Dawn Editions") is located in Spain. "Independent publishing house of underground esotericism, counterculture and Lovecraftian themes founded in Xàtiva in 2019 ... Among its most notable authors are: H.P. Lovecraft, Austin Osman Spare, Arthur Machen, Aleister Crowley, Thomas Ligotti, Clark Ashton Smith, Phil Hine, Michael Bertiaux, Phil Baker, Peter J. Carroll, Nema Andahadna and S.T. Joshi." The book can apparently be ordered from the publisher, but if you want to search for it from another vendor, the title in Spanish is La Capilla Peligrosa. Vida y crímenes mentales de Robert Anton Wilson.
Thursday, September 11, 2025
'Tales of Iluminatus #2' close to being finished
Bobby Campbell reports that the second issue of his Tales of Illuminatus! comic book series will be out soon:
"I'm very happy to announce that we are in the final stages of production on Tales of Illuminatus! #2!
"Specifically, I only have 5 pages left to draw :)))
"We didn't win a lottery spot to exhibit at the Small Press Expo this year, so our hard deadline got a little softer, but the end is still very much nigh!
"I'll be shutting down late Kickstarter pledges next Friday (9/19) and begin the process of collecting addresses for shipping out our pre-orders.
"I'm not quite ready to nail down a specific date yet, as circumstances remain variable, and I'm leaning towards quality over speed, so I hope you will accept an amorphous, yet incandescent, 'SOON'."
More details at the Substack, which you can subscribe to.
Wednesday, September 10, 2025
RAW Semantics on physicist Roger Jones
A new post from Brian Dean, "‘Physics as Metaphor’ & RAW." It begins:
"Here’s a book that Robert Anton Wilson cites intriguingly: Physics as Metaphor, by Roger Jones (1982). And what an unexpectedly wide, deep and luxuriant read. Bob W. references it several times, and it’s on at least one of his book lists (’50 books from the library of Robert Anton Wilson’, RE/Search #18). I said 'unexpectedly' as I haven’t seen it mentioned before in the wider Wilson world. Hence this post, and a query."
As is usual with Brian, the accompanying artwork is arresting, and as is usual with me, I've nicked one.
Tuesday, September 9, 2025
I keep running into Yukio Mishima
Yukio Mishima in 1955. Public domain photo by Ken Domon.
If you are a serious reader, you have probably heard of the Japanese writer Yukio Mishima, who died in 1970, age 45, in a ritual suicide after a failed coup attempt.
For years, I didn't consider reading him, in spite of his literary fame, as I assumed he was the sort of ultranationalist, far right wing nut who could be safely ignored. Lately, though, I have wondered if he falls into the Ezra Pound category, i.e. a person with terrible politics who is nonetheless worth reading. I keep running into references to him by people who have nothing to do with Mishima's political views.
I am a fan of the surrealist American poet Charles Henri Ford (1908-2002) and when I read one of his anthologies, I noticed a poem about Mishima (titled "Mishima," as part of "Four Elegies.") It's not entirely flattering ("Actually you were more attracted to power than to people or to art") but the fact that Ford bothered to write about him at all interested me.
I don't know what Robert Anton Wilson thought about Mishima, but Robert Shea was a fan. Here's an interview with Shea is Science Fiction Review:
SFR: What contemporary authors do you get the most out of reading?
SHEA: The list is continually undergoing revision as my taste changes and my reasons for reading change, but John Fowles, Romain Gary, Norman Mailer, Yukio Mishima, Vladimir Nabokov, George Orwell, Thomas Pynchon, J.R.R. Tolkien and Robert Penn Warren seem to have taken up permanent residence in my literary pantheon.
I am currently reading Kumano Kodo: Pilgrimage to Powerspots (about an old pilgrimage trail in Japan) by J. Christian Greer and Michelle K. Oing, and it relates a short story by Mishima.
So: Should I read Mishima?
Monday, September 8, 2025
'Vineland' online reading group, Chapter 11
Special guest blogger
"The informal slogan around 24fps was Che Guevara's phrase 'Wherever death my surprise us.' It didn't have to be big and dramatic, like warfare in the street, it could happen as easily where they chose to take their witness, back in the shadows lighting up things the networks never would ..."– Vineland, p. 202-203
Sunday, September 7, 2025
More on basic income
The links-with-commentary is one of my favorite items in the Astral Codex Ten Substack, and the "Links for September 2025" did not disappoint. After I did the recent posting on new basic income information, and read the comments that followed, I discovered that Scott also had covered the recent controversy (item No. 54). Scott adds this bit:
"GiveDirectly, a charity involved in basic income experiments, has a response here; they say that some studies are positive, and that the ones that aren’t might have tried too little cash to matter, or been confounded by COVID making everything worse. They also point out that basic income is harder to study than traditional programs like giving people housing, because if you’re giving housing you can measure housing-related outcomes directly and have a pretty good chance of getting enough statistical power to find them, but since everyone spends cash on different things, the positive effects might be scattered across many different outcomes (and therefore too small to reach significance on each).
"Everyone involved in this debate wants to emphasize that the poor results are for First World studies only, and that studies continue to show large benefits to giving cash in the developing world."
There are also other points Scott makes.
Also in the same newsletter, interesting news about AI, age of consent in different European countries and other matters, including the observation, "Andy Masley’s AI art is good." An example is above.
Saturday, September 6, 2025
'Magnificent Ambersons' to get AI treatment
Photo from the Magnificent Ambersons, with Anne Baxter in the middle.
From the Hollywood Reporter:
"Since the rise of generative artificial intelligence in 2022, the technology has mostly been plugged into parts of the production pipeline as far as its deployment in Hollywood. Think visual effects, dubbing and storyboarding. As it stands, it’s mostly thought of as a tool to streamline certain processes and cut costs.
"But others have their sights set on completely overhauling the entertainment industry’s use of AI. At the forefront: Showrunner, which plans to reconstruct the destroyed 43 minutes of Orson Welles‘ The Magnificent Ambersons."
This is an update to some news I reported back in 2023, but AI wasn't mentioned yet.
Still no word on using AI to restore the lost pages from Illuminatus! That's a joke, of course. Well, I think it is ...
Friday, September 5, 2025
New studies don't cast basic income in a good light
Photo by Colin Watts on Unsplash
I've done past blog posts on the basic income guarantee, the idea that the government should use cash transfers to make sure everyone has a minimum income, because it's an intriguing idea and Robert Anton Wilson was interested in it.
I've noticed recent news here and there that recent studies of such programs haven't been very encouraging, and Substacker Noah Smith, in a recent piece, has a good summary, excerpt:
"In recent years, some new research has come out that tempered my enthusiasm for the cash benefit revolution. First, a basic income trial in Denver failed to decrease homelessness, which is one thing you’d really like to see basic income do. Then, an even bigger basic income trial in Texas and Illinois found that just $1000 a month caused 2% of people to stop working — a very big disemployment effect, contradicting the results of earlier studies. Worryingly, this study is much more believable than any of the more optimistic studies, since it’s a very large randomized controlled trial. (Of course, it’s just one study; the papers showing little effect are still more numerous, even if no single one is as reliable.)
"Meanwhile, a lot of these studies are finding that cash benefits aren’t really doing much to improve quality of life for the people who get the cash. You can measure various things we think curing poverty ought to improve, like health, education, employment, housing, etc. And unfortunately, these recent studies show that cash benefits aren’t making those indicators look much better."
There's more at the link. I should note that Smith still favors cash transfers:
"A more valid counterargument — and one that Bruenig touches on, but could have been a lot more explicit about — is that poor people having more cash is simply a good thing in and of itself, whether or not their kids become healthier or they get a better education or they report less depression. Being able to afford more food, more transportation, more housing, etc. makes your life better, even if it doesn’t make you lead a healthier lifestyle."
In his newsletter, in an issue that I can't link to because its behind a paywall, Richard Hanania says those results are unsurprising. "The underlying premise was wrong. There's this idea that poor people are just normal people with less money, rather than understanding they're poor in the first place because they have dysfunctional traits. Money will not solve low intelligence, poor impulse control, an inability to cope with unexpected challenges, etc. This is something conservatives have been historically more likely to take for granted."
Thursday, September 4, 2025
Who's our greatest living novelist?
Richard Powers (Creative Commons photo by Phoebe Ayers, details here.)
In his recent piece on Thomas Pynchon that I blogged about a few days ago, PQ writes, "Pynchon is arguably the greatest living novelist on the strength of Gravity's Rainbow (1973) alone ... "
This is obviously not an unreasonable opinion, but it made me wonder what other writers plausibly could be suggested. (For the sake of discussion, let's limit this to writers from the U.S.) Colson Whitehead? Don DeLillo? Anne Tyler? N.K. Jemisin? Alice Walker? Stephen King? Percival Everett? Barbara Kingsolver? Who am I missing?
My three favorite "name" writers are Richard Powers, Neal Stephenson and Tom Perrotta. Whenever any of those three issues a new book, I have to read it, ASAP.
Powers probably would be the writer among those three with the biggest literary reputation. He won the National Book Award for The Echo Maker, the Pulitzer Prize for The Overstory and was awarded a MacArthur "genius" grant. The Gold Bug Variations is another well-regarded novel, and I liked Playground, the one that came out last year.
I actually interviewed Powers via email after another novel I liked, Orfeo, was published, here is my interview.
Wednesday, September 3, 2025
What we read last month
What I read last month:
The Sound of Utopia: Musicians in the Time of Stalin, Michel Krielaars. About musicians and composers who faced persecution in the Soviet Union. I especially liked the chapter on Prokofiev.
Keys to a Successful Retirement: Staying Happy, Active, and Productive in Your Retired Years, Fritz Gilbert. Some good ideas.
Salt, Adam Roberts. First novel by a British writer I have gotten interested in. Roberts is consistently a good read.
The Sex Magicians, Robert Anton Williams. A re-read to participate in the online reading group at the Jechidah blog.
The Cambridge Companion to Epicureanism, James Warren editor. A good collection of essays. I've now read 14 books on Epicureanism.
The Book of Forbidden Words: A Liberated Dictionary of Improper English, Robert Anton Wilson. An easy read, I learned some things. Not a core RAW book for me.
What Mark Brown read last month:
Solaris by Stanislaw Lem 8/2
Beyond Apollo by Barry N. Malzberg 8/8
The Jonah Kit by Ian Watson 8/16
The Illuminati Papers by Robert Anton Wilson 8/20
Mythologies by Roland Barthes 8/21
The Deathworld Trilogy by Harry Harrison 8/31
I'm busy reading classic science fiction this month as a judge for the Prometheus Hall of Fame award, so my list next month will look more like Mark's.
Tuesday, September 2, 2025
An 'Illuminatus!' anniversary
Alerted by an anonymous comment to Sunday's post about Illuminatus!, I pulled my old copy of The Eye in the Pyramid, dating to the 1970s, off my bookshelf and read that the first printing was September 1975. In other words, this month is the 50th anniversary of the publication of the first book of the trilogy! I am particularly delighted about this for reasons that will become clear shortly.