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| Witch's Guide To Faery Folk |
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| Edain McCoy |
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Reclaiming Our Working Relationship With Invisible Helpers
Faeries are far more than little creatures with wings! In A Witch's Guide to Faery Folk by Edain McCoy you will finally discover what may be the greatest enchantment of the astral realms. Unlock the rich heritage of working with faery folk that Pagan ancestors used on a daily basis. Included are practical methods and useful tips for working with faeries and other elemental beings in magick and ritual.
- Learn how and where to contact faery folk.
- Discover which faeries can help you with divination, past life recall, scrying, and spiritual quests.
- Use guided meditation to travel to Faeryland.
- Identify different faery types and discover the ones most suited to various kinds of magick.
- Learn to create your own faery being to fulfill specific tasks such as protection of your home.
In order to make you comfortable with the denizens of the world of the faery, you will need to know as much about them as possible. In A Witch's Guide to Faery Folk you will find a massive dictionary of 230 faery folk, from Alvens to Wisps ñ describing what they are like, where they come from, alternate names, their lore, and much more. Types of faeries included here include goblins, elementals, gnomes, seasonal faeries, angels, and even Santa Claus.
A Witch's Guide to Faery Folk shares what you need to know in order to establish a strong working relationship with the faery folk. From history and lore to practical techniques, no other book gives you all of the vital information found here.
If you are looking for a way to expand your knowledge of the invisible worlds and gain working partners for your magick and spells, you must get A Witch's Guide to Faery Folk.
Edain McCoy became a self-initiated Witch in 1981 and has been an active part of the Pagan community since her formal initiation into a large San Antonio coven in 1983. She has been researching alternative spiritualities since her teens, when she was first introduced to Kaballah, or Jewish mysticism. Since then she has studied a variety of magickal paths including Celtic Witchcraft, Appalachian folk magick, and Curanderismo, a Mexican-American folk tradition. Today she is part of the Wittan Irish Pagan tradition, where she is a priestess of Brighid and an elder. An alumnus of the University of Texas with a B.A. in History, she is active in several professional writer's organizations, is listed in the reference guide Contemporary Authors, and occasionally presents workshops on magickal topics or works individually with students who wish to study Witchcraft. This former woodwind player for the Lynchburg (VA) Symphony claims both the infamous feuding McCoy family of Kentucky and Sir Roger Williams, the seventeenth-century religious dissenter, as branches on her ethnically diverse family tree. In her "real life," Edain works as a licensed stockbroker.
Llewellyn Publications 1994
Softcover 384 pages |
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| LIB000107 |
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