This is a small volume, but I treasure anything by or about Ella Young.
https://amzn.to/4dLYuLz
and spins tales
and spins tales
Ash NicSidhe has been a voice in the Pagan and Traditional Witchcraft community for over fifty years, writing under this name and its evolving magical lineage. Her work explores Witchcraft, folklore, Tarot, and the esoteric arts, weaving scholarly insight with lived ritual experience and initiatory tradition. As Elder High Priestess of Nemed Cuculatii, she continues to serve as a guardian of the old ways and a trickster of the spiral path. Her writing has appeared in The Witches’ Almanac, The Crystal Well, and other Pagan publications back into the 1970s. She has also contributed to books including The Small-Town Pagan's Survival Guide, Reflections in Diana’s Mirror: A Devotional for the Queen of Heaven, Which Witch is Which, and more.
In Riding Wildfire, Thomas McCrae endures years of grief and hardship after losing his beloved Clara, who vanished into a blizzard chasing her wild pony, Wildfire. Haunted by the hoot-owl’s nightly calls—an omen of death—Thomas waits, believing Clara’s spirit still rides the prairie winds.
Some rambling thoughts o the origins of the Memorial Day holiday, irs origins and history and what it means to me, as a veteran.
Towards the end of March, the characters related to the *Good Bones* saga began talking to me—no, lecturing me. More specifically, Brooke Morningstar’s grandparents, Anastazia and Józef, both Holocaust survivors, sat me down one evening and began telling me their harrowing story. From Auschwitz-Birkenau, to their struggle for survival and eventual reunion in Prague, their journey is one of resilience and love. Not to mention their history has some parallels to current events today.
In the realm of Carl Jung’s psychology, shadow work has become a popular term, often conjuring images of exploring one’s darker impulses and repressed flaws. It’s a practice of looking within, facing those aspects of ourselves we’d rather deny—our anger, jealousy, or selfishness. While this journey is undoubtedly transformative, there’s another, equally vital side to the shadow that often goes unnoticed. What if, instead of only confronting what we fear in ourselves, we also asked: What good have we buried in the shadow?
I’m having to do revisions on Unseen, part one of The Dreams that Carried Us. (The full trilogy consists of Unseen, Unbroken, and Unbound.)
These three stories tell the
I try to keep a lot of my political views off of this sight (and off of my writing social media accounts. I don’t always succeed.) I do have a place where I put that kind of stuff, if you mght be interested in what a left-leaning transgender lesbian moght […]