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  • by Meg Rosenbrier

    Filled with more than 100 spells and rituals, this accessible guide helps witches heal themselves, their community, and the planet. Perfect for the modern witch who needs to fit spells and rituals into a busy day, The Healing Power of Witchcraft helps you use your witchy energy to heal whatever ails you and your world.
  • by Simon Webb

    “Webb takes what we know about these magical beings via pop culture and explores their origins and how their respective images have changed over time.” —The Portalist
    After reading this book, nobody will ever be able to view Gandalf the wizard in the same light and even old fairy tales ,such as “Beauty and the Beast,” will take on a richer and deeper meaning. In short, our perception of wizards, witches and fairies will be altered forever.  
  • The Other Side of the Sun

    $0.00
    Author: Madeleine L'Engle Length: 342 pages
  • by Louis Maestros

    "One has to write with considerable authenticity to pull off a story steeped in magic and swamp water that examines race and class, death and rebirth, Haitian voodoo, and the beginnings of jazz in 1891 New Orleans. Maistros's gritty debut novel follows the interconnected lives of the Morningstar siblings--all lovingly named by their father after disease-- as they wrestle with a powerful demon, con outsiders, kill and die, die and are reborn. The plot is complex and magical, grounded in the history of the city, without being overly sentimental. There is a comfort with death as a part of life in this work that reveals deep feeling for the city and its past. Of course, every novel about New Orleans must have a good hurricane. Like the one in Zora Neale Hurston's classic Their Eyes Were Watching God, this hurricane destroys the city while making hope possible. Highly recommended for all fiction collections, especially where there is an interest in jazz." --Library Journal
    "This book sings out in true jazz fashion -- wildly inventive, oddly formed yet perfectly made, and never a sour note." -- The Anniston Star
    "Louis Maistros has written a lyrical, complex, and brave novel that takes enormous risks and pulls them all off. He is a writer to watch and keep reading, a writer to cherish." -- Peter Straub
    Maistros creates a city that is part dream, part hallucination. His New Orleans embodies both the grim reality of a particular time and the city's eternal, shimmering beauty. And, with the book's title, he provides us with a new and unforgettable metaphor for the sound of hammers at work, whether boarding up for a storm or rebuilding after one." -- Susan Larson, New Orleans Times-Picayune & USA Today
    "The Sound of Building Coffins is a macabre and utterly hypnotic feat of literary imagination, an extended tale of voodoo and jazz in the Crescent City, circa the turn of the 20th century. The novel is so fluently delivered that it sometimes feels as if it were being channeled via the same spirits - evil and good - that inhabit these richly drawn characters. Maistros, a New Orleans record-store owner and former forklift operator with no formal training as a writer, has crafted a work spiked with historical characters and events, so striking and original that it probably deserves a place on the shelf of great fiction from his adopted hometown." -- Phillip Booth, St. Petersburg Times
    "The Society of North American Magic Realists welcomes its newest, most dazzling member, Louis Maistros. His debut novel is a thing of wonder, unlike anything in our literature. It startles. It stuns. It stupefies. No novel since A Confederacy of Dunces has done such justice to New Orleans." -- Donald Harington, winner of the Robert Penn Warren Award
    "A writer of lesser ability would have been swallowed up in the swirling complexity of such a plot, plunging it to the level of a silly period piece regional novel. However, The Sound of Building Coffins is different. Maistros keeps his head above water and pulls off an admirable story because of his keen research into the history of New Orleans and his compelling style that is fired by his use of foreboding imagery. The Sound of Building Coffins is riveting. It is a good read and a remarkable first novel." -- Endtype: A Canadian Literary Magazine
     
  • by Jennifer Sherman Roberts

    In seventeenth-century England, a female healer enflames the fury of a witchfinder in this propulsive novel about murder, revenge, and the dangerous power of knowledge.  
  • by Paulette Kennedy

    In Depression-era Arkansas, something wicked has come to a haunted mountain town in a novel of uncanny suspense by the author of Parting the Veil.
  • The Witchfinder’s Sister

    $0.00
    Author: Beth Underdown Length: 368 pages
  • The Witching Hour

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  • Author: L. Frank Baum Length: 272 pages
  • by Elaine Breslaw

    “A fascinating re-examination of the Salem witchhunts and the woman whose confession initiated them” (Robynne Rogers Healey, University of Alberta).
    A landmark contribution to women’s history and early American history, Tituba, Reluctant Witch of Salem sheds new light on one of the most painful episodes in American history, through the eyes of its most crucial participan
  • by Glendy Vanderah

    An Amazon Charts, Wall Street Journal, and Washington Post bestseller, and a Goodreads Choice Award finalist.
    In this gorgeously stunning debut, a mysterious child teaches two strangers how to love and trust again.  
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