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Review: Sigil Witchery: A Witches Guide to Crafting Magick Symbols by Laura Tempest Zakroff.

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Sigil Witchery is both a thorough and often surprising history of sigils, as well as an entertaining practical guide suitable for the beginner and advanced practitioner alike. Crucially, Zakroff is respectful of the many world traditions and cultures she draws her information from and also brings her own knowledge and application to the subject. The result is a book which allows the reader to understand sigils from the many perspectives of folklore and witchcraft and which guides the reader through exercises and applications which can later be pursued in a personal direction. Before the review proper, a word of appreciation has to go out to the staff at Llewellyn who designed the format of this book. Because the author used so many illustrations and exercise pages, the usual book dimensions would have been inadequate in displaying how the writing and drawings compliment each other. The layout instead allows the reader to easily take in the designs and photographs...

7 Vampire Novels You May Have Missed.

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In the almost 120 years since Bram Stoker’s Dracula was published, the notion of gothic immortality has both fascinated and terrified us in equal measure. However, that dark romanticism has lent itself to many different genres since then and vampires have appeared in such unusual locations as the American Civil War with Seth Grahame Smith’s Abraham Lincoln Vampire Hunter, as predators from outer space in Colin Wilson’s The Space Vampires, and as world conquerors and civilization builders in Brian Stableford’s The Empire of Fear. Some other vampire novels that immediately come to mind include Interview with the Vampire by Anne Rice, Let the Right One In by John Ajvide Lindqvist, Fevre Dream by George R. R. Martin, They Thirst by Robert R. McCammon; I am Legend by Richard Mathisen (Not strictly vampires!) and Lost Souls by Poppy Z. Brite. However, there have also been many vampire novels, including recent releases, which have not received the attention they deserved a...

Review: Psychedelic Journal XXIII-The Discordian Issue.

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Issue 23 of the Psychedelic Press journal examines Dicordianism from both a historical and cultural perspective. Along the way writings encompass the magickal, artistic and, of course, the personal transformative effects of this paradigm-shifting philosophy. The journal includes contributions from nine contributors as well as a wonderful introduction and overview by the editor, Nikki Wyrd. As a reader might expect from a publication focused on topics such as chaos and imagination, the chapters comprise of outlooks and experiences which might seem disconnected on the surface level but which all demonstrate the humour, the consciousness expanding results and, not least, the courage of the Discordian outlook. The first included writer, Havelock Ellis, demonstrates the exploratory nature of Discordian thinking by describing his first encounter with mescaline. This account from 1898 details the psychedelic effects of mescaline on Ellis and his friends. Ellis experiment...

Video Review: Grimoires: A History of Magic Books by Owen Davies.

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This overview of the grimoire tradition is an essential addition to any collection. Davies is both thorough and entertaining in his opinions and histories. This is probably the perfect approach to take when trying to cover such a broad spectrum of traditions and cultures. To purchase Grimoires: A History of Magic Books go  here. Video review here:

Review: The Druid Code: Magic, Megaliths and Mythology by Thomas Sheridan.

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In Thomas Sheridan's extensive study of Irish mythology and history the reader gets a perspective which combines both a folkloric and symbolic framework. This is an often overlooked type of examination when it comes to Irish history but one which is most valuable to the unbiased thinker. In many instances accurate exploration and indeed interpretation of Irish megaliths has been forced to fit a worldview which sees Christianity as the most logical and enlightened conclusion. While many Irish archaeologists and historians of the twentieth century had a reflexively Biblical starting position this is no longer an excuse for academics today who have extensive documents, comparative religious sources and archaeo-astronomical evidence at their disposal. Depressingly, Sheridan demonstrates that even with this potential for new appraisal, up until recently Irish archaeology has still been reluctant to accept and embrace the true scope of its pagan past. Rather than succumbing t...

Review: The Sacred History: How Angels, Mystics and Higher Intelligence Made Our World by Mark Booth (Jonathan Black).

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In The Sacred History author Jonathan Black (AKA Mark Booth) sets out the case for idealism over materialism. Following on from his previous book The Secret History of the World the author this time uses an approach to mysticism that is possibly easier for the layperson to understand. The reason for this is the focus upon myth and the explanation of various religious and spiritual traditions and texts as opposed to the possibly more studious scope of his previous work. When we look back upon the history of sacred writings and wisdom supposedly gained through higher states of consciousness we must place a huge amount of faith in the notion of intuition and the idea that there is a common path applicable to us all. Idealism, as Black sees it, is the belief that thought came before matter and all of existence is somehow the expression of this original mind. In the book we are taken on a journey that begins with our earliest intimations of this higher aspect through creation myths ...

Fiction Review: The Race by Nina Allan.

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On the surface, Nina Allan’s novel is about alternate realities and the quest to overcome individual and collective perceptions. The story concerns various characters connected through generations and imaginings. Some of the characters believe they have corresponding siblings on the periphery of their own worlds. The arc of the novel concerns itself with the attempts of these people and their society to make sense of strange signals and communications said to come from the stars or, possibly, other dimensions. This novel unfurls slowly. The connections touch and drift, almost like a maze-like puzzle running through the story of each character. You wonder at the sub-text of each incident, trying to remember if a reflection or clue has already been glimpsed in a previous chapter. Not that the novel is elusive, rather, the rewards are greater if you stay alert to the connections and what lies behind the words and events. This novel is all about language and how it creates v...