Sunday 25 September 2022

The Modern Craft: Powerful Voices on Witchcraft Ethics Edited by Claire Askew and Alice Tarbuck

 


Publisher: Watkins Publishing
Publication Date: 14 Jun. 2022
Genre: New Age/ Occult
Summary: 
In a world that often feels like it makes no sense, many people have begun to reach out to the numinous for a sense of understanding and connection. Looking back to ancient wisdom, folklore and classic texts for answers can be helpful, but sometimes without the context of the contemporary it can be hard to see how these old ways apply to the here and now. Too often, depictions of witches – and indeed some contemporary witchcraft practices – perpetuate harmful racist, colonialist and culturally appropriative narratives. Gender essentialism crops up often in witchcraft circles, and  #witchgoals trends proliferated by large companies and mass media raises troubling questions about the relationship between witchcraft and capitalism. The Modern Craft is an eclectic and radical collection of essays on witchcraft practice and the ethics of magic, which gives that much-needed modern context to timeless wisdom. This is a fascinating snapshot of contemporary occult practice viewed through an intersectional lens. Essays include poets on the magic inherent in language, working-class witches on the reclamation of agency through practical spellwork, and gender fluid practitioners on the necessity of breaking down traditional hierarchies in magical symbolism. Poetic, inspiring and electrifying glimpses from the brink of contemporary craft, these essays show how anyone, no matter where they live or who they are, can find positivity and the force for powerful change in the subversive unknown.


Review:

I have to start by thanking Watkins publishing because they sent me a beautiful physical copy of this book and it's a lovely thing to be able to hold and flick through.
It took me a while to finish reading this book, far longer than I normally take to read. And I think that's because it's a series of essays and each one very much give you the author's voice, which I loved, but that made it difficult to sit and read in one sitting. Each essay also gave you plenty to think about, and I didn't like moving on to the next one straight away without letting what the last author said sink in.
As it's a collection of essays with a variety of people contributing some obviously you connect with more than others but again that's the beauty of this book. It gives you the opportunity to hear other points of view and opinions but also with the ones you really do connect with it makes you feel like you're not on your own with this and there is someone who thinks or feels the same. 
For me I felt like I connnected with the Mental health and magic essay a heck of a lot, it was one I really had to sit back after reading and think about.
I loved that this book made me sit and think after each essay, and yes it took so much longer to read(i received this book before publication so I really have been slow to review) but I think that it was better to take the time and thought than just skim read and review in a rush for publication.
Not only did I come away from this book having, I feel, learned a lot I came away with a huge reading list! Some of the authors mention other authors or books that I've ended up putting on my tbr pile.
It's defiantly a book id recommend to others in the community because we lack books on the subject of witchcraft ethics and this is defiantly a good one to start that section off with.


Krystina x

Belladonna by Adalyn Grace

 





Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton
Publication Date: 30 Aug. 2022
Genre: Young Adult
Summary:
For as long as Signa Farrow has been alive, the people in her life have fallen like stars . . .

Orphaned as a baby, nineteen-year-old Signa has been raised by a string of guardians, each more interested in her wealth than her wellbeing - and each has met an untimely end. Her remaining relatives are the elusive Hawthornes, an eccentric family living at Thorn Grove, an estate both glittering and gloomy.

Its patriarch mourns his late wife through wild parties, while his son grapples for control of the family's waning reputation and his daughter suffers from a mysterious illness. But when their mother's restless spirit appears claiming she was poisoned, Signa realizes that the family she depends on could be in grave danger, and enlists the help of a surly stable boy to hunt down the killer.

Signa's best chance of uncovering the murderer, though, is an alliance with Death himself, a fascinating, dangerous shadow who has never been far from her side. Though he's made her life a living hell, Death shows Signa that their growing connection may be more powerful - and more irresistible - than she ever dared imagine.



Review:

I have to start by saying I absolutely loved this book! I loved the sound of it when I read the blurb on NetGalley and I was so happy when I got approved for it. Unusually for me I requested the Audiobook, this was only about the 3rd audiobook I've listened to and this was fabulous. The narrator was brilliant her pacing was spot on and her voices for the different characters were great I really hope they get her to do the rest of the series. I think I started saying how brilliant the book was about 3 chapters in and I ended up convincing two other fabulous bloggers at Reads must and Reading the year away to join me in reading it as a mini read-along/bookclub( ill pop links to their blogs/ Instagram at the end so you can see what they thought). By the time they requested it the audiobook wasn't available so they both read instead of listening to it, which meant that they finished way before me and I think we perceived things differently because of that. For example, I wasn't surprised that Death and Silas were the same person, I think early on I clocked onto that and I'm not sure if that was because the voices being used were quite similar or the way they used certain phrases were similar or that I just saw that plot hook coming. But both of my fellow bloggers were surprised by it.
I have to say my absolute favorite parts of this book were the interactions between Signa and Death and watching their relationship blossom, I just couldn't get enough of those parts they were so well written. And I really can't wait for book 2 for more of it!
I honestly didn't see Percy being the killer, that was a surprise to me. And his level of planning to try and see though what he wanted to happen was impressive.
I think I've given enough spoilers, for now, if you want them all you'll have to go buy the book! (i pre-ordered it right after I finished the audiobook)
I don't usually score my none book club reviews... but this was 5-star!

Krystina x

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