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People often ask me for book recommendations. Here is a short list of my favorites. These are all books I consider essential building blocks of a good Pagan library. Of course, my own library has many more than these! But these are a great start. If you notice certain authors appearing over and over, it's because their reliability and clarity warrants my trust. Don't forget my own work here.
Introduction to Wicca
History of Wicca
How-To Books (Practicing Wicca)
- "A Witches' Bible" by Janet & Stewart Farrar
This superb how-to of traditionalist (mostly Alexandrian) Craft is controversial because it purports to reveal oathbound secrets. It is nonetheless ten times more thorough, thoughtful and interesting than most available books. A grain of salt is wise with any book, of course, but this one is so worthwhile. My copy is well-thumbed from years of fond use.
- "The Spiral Dance" by Starhawk
If A Witches’ Bible is the best traditionalist how-to, then Spiral Dance is the best eclectic how-to. This one gives you a real understanding of an approach that bypasses rules and comes straight from the gut.
- "Witchcraft for Tomorrow" by Doreen Valiente
A wonderful, poetic guide by one of the great Ladies of the Craft.
- "Wicca: A Guide for the Solitary Practitioner" by Scott Cunningham
Scott’s gift was to simplify his material into clear, concise, accessible instructions, and this one is no exception.
- "Rites of Worship: A Neopagan Approach" by Isaac Bonewits
Isaac approaches the creation of Neopagan rituals from a lifetime of experience. A wealth of knowledge in a slim volume.
- "Magical Rites from the Crystal Well" by Ed Fitch
This is a sweet and straightforward book, with a wide variety of rituals, by a true founder of the American Wiccan movement
- "Wicca Covens: How to Start and Organize Your Own" by Judy Harrow
This book is simply unique, and uniquely valuable. It approaches a coven as an entity with needs of its own. Where most books simply assume that Wicca is Wicca, whether practiced solitary, as a couple, or in a group, Harrow recognizes that groups interact in particular, and sometimes difficult, ways.
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Books on Gods, Goddesses and Myth
Books on Magic
Self-Actualization
- "Inner Work" by Robert Johnson
Johnson has written several books that approach myth from a Jungian perspective. This one is different. Half of it is devoted to dream analysis, the other half to active imagination. Both are powerful tools for transformation, very applicable to solitary or coven work.
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