The book and layout are well made but this is very much just an add space for Craig Williams first two books, entering the desert and tantric physics along with a reading list of other books that inspired his practice and esoteric work. If you were hoping for some historical deep dive on a lost sect of Christianity or look into the cults of the land space known as Golgotha, that's not what this book is.
I do very much enjoy the work of Craig Williams, both written and interviews, yet this book very much reads like a twelve-year-old's tree house manifesto he wrote for his cool exclusive club he got the idea for after reading any book or all books by Robert Anton Wilson. An author who is never mention in this sprawling suggested reading list interspersed throughout the "psi-entist trance-missions". But William S Burroughs does get a dedicated chapter so that's nice.
If you do pick up this book I would highly recommended reading Josephine McCarthy's The Work of the Hierophant first to help make sense of the magical order Craig Williams has built and what their goals are, which is actually what this book is about.
A lot is said in this book about esoteric/occult creativity being a goal of their(the cult of Golgotha) work, yet I feel a conversation on whether occult creativity obscures more then it helps in a vast landscape lacking clarity.
So let me save you $27 and tell you to check out entering the desert and tantric physics, I hear their really good!