It has been pointed out to me that at the moment Amazon is running some really great deals on its top-10 best-selling I found it interesting, but felt that in places the evidence provided in terms of historical and archaeological research was a bit too vague to be entirely convincing. Mind you, I'm no academic historian and seeing as this is a number-one best seller, other people plainly rate it highly. If you can pick up a copy for 60p or so then surely it is worth reading and seeing what you think.
The following three
As I said in my my review of Traditional Witchcraft for the Seashore: "Melusine offers a selection of easy pathworkings and visualisations plus traditional folk spells and that you can whisper quietly or just go through mentally without saying anything aloud while sitting by the seashore or standing before the waves. The book also suggests creating a small garden containing such things as shingle, bits of driftwood, shells and plants that are happy growing on dunes and shingle or inland."
A few years ago, I read and reviewed Melusine's first book in her Traditional Witchcraft series. It was originally called Mean Streets Witchcraft, but was later renamed Traditional Witchcraft for Urban Living.It offers some really excellent advice for city witches. It isn't in Amazon's top 10 at the moment, but that is probably because it is a relatively old book. If you haven't read it yet, Amazon is currently offering the Kindle versionat such great value that most witches could easily afford to buy the entire series.
I have no idea how long these offers will last, so you might want to take advantage of them before they change.
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