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Loading... Circle, Coven & Grove: A Year of Magickal Practiceby Deborah Blake
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Review located at http://lupabitch.wordpress.com/2008/04/07/facing-north-reviews/ no reviews | add a review
Green, Celtic, Alexandrian, Eclectic...every circle, coven, and grove of Witches is as unique as the magick they practice. No matter what kind of Witch you are, High Priestess Deborah Blake's guide to ritual has something for you. Part instruction manual, part personal journal, and part Book of Shadows, this all-in-one ritual handbook is an ideal tool for busy Witches, new covens, and new priestesses, priests, or coven leaders. Celebrate the Wheel of the Year with original group rituals that can be used as written, personalized to reflect your coven's unique style, or modified for solitary practitioners. Along with practical tips on ritual basics, there are beautifully written New Moon rituals, Full Moon rituals, and Sabbat celebrations for each month and season. Circle, Coven & Grove presents basic correspondences for magickal practice and coven work essentials such as circle etiquette. With seasonal spells, blessings, and rituals for celebrating holidays, increasing energy, giving thanks, healing, and more, this friendly book has everything you need. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)299.94Religions Other Religions By Region/Civilization Other Neopaganism, WiccaLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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I picked this book up because I own and expand yearly on my collection of books which talk about the sabbats. And this one is broken down by months, with a ritual and a spell or activity in each. This book is about how to run a circle two to three times a month, for holidays and new and full moons, but it's only truly helpful in my opinion if you live where there is absolutley no pagan community to draw on anywhere (including the internet).
I started skimming somewhere around page eighty or ninty and never stopped. I'm amazing at how brazenly the author very much has things written in her preamble that anything that feels right (an' harms none) is perfectly acceptable, but then words the rest of her book for doing things only this specific way.
I'll definitely be adding this one up to my bookswap. ( )