The Complete Book of Spells, Curses, and Magical Recipes

The Complete Book of Spells, Curses, and Magical Recipes
Author: Leonard R. N. Ashley
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 544
Release: 2011-10-10
Genre: Body, Mind & Spirit
ISBN: 1628731729

Do you want to cast a spell on a suitor, banish a ghost, cure a toothache, or harvest protective herbs? If so, this is the book for you. The Complete Book of Spells, Curses, and Magical Recipes explains how men and women throughout history have invoked the supernatural for specific uses and provides information about the history of witchcraft, magical recipes, and occult practices from ancient to modern times. Here is a comprehensive and enlightening guide to the rites, rituals, and magic of cultures throughout time.

The Dartmouth Cobras Box Set Volume 1

The Dartmouth Cobras Box Set Volume 1
Author: Bianca Sommerland
Publisher: Bianca Sommerland
Total Pages: 1241
Release: 2013-02-28
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0987904434

Learn to play the game. Knights of ice and Masters in the bedroom, The Dartmouth Cobras struggle to save their franchise while losing their hearts to the only women who can handle how hard and fast they live. Between corrupt owners, pressure from fans and the media, and desires beyond the norm, they have to fight to make their mark as a hockey team. All the men share a common goal. Giving their all on the ice. And in love. GAME MISCONDUCT (The Dartmouth Cobras #1) DEFENSIVE ZONE (The Dartmouth Cobras #2) BREAKAWAY (The Dartmouth Cobras #3) You can also pick up Volume 2 (books 4-6)

Snakes, People, and Spirits, Volume One

Snakes, People, and Spirits, Volume One
Author: Robert Hazel
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages: 567
Release: 2019-11-05
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1527542920

This two-volume publication offers an in-depth analysis of ophidian symbolism in Eastern Africa, while setting the topic within its regional and historical context: namely, with regards to the rest of Africa, ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia, the Greek world, ancient Palestine, Arabia, India, and medieval and pre-Christian Europe. Through the ages, most of those areas have connected with Eastern Africa in a broad sense, where ophidian symbolism was as “rampant” and far-reaching, if not more so, as anywhere else on the continent, and perhaps in past civilisations. Much as in the wider context, snakes were held to be long-lived, closely related to holes, caverns, trees, and water, life and death, and credited with a liking for milk. Even though ophidian symbolism has always been developed out of the outstanding biological and ethological features of snakes, the process of symbolisation, which plays a crucial role in the elaboration of cultural systems and the shaping of human experience, was inevitably at work. This first volume deals with snakes as a zoological category; snake symbolism as perceived by encyclopaedists and psychologists; and ophidian symbolism as it occurred in ancient civilisations. It explores the traditional African scene in general with a view to set the scene for a more proximate baseline for comparison. The divide between animals and humans was porous, and snakes had a more or less equal footing in both the animal realm and the spiritual world. Key features of snake symbolism in traditional Eastern Africa are then examined in detail, especially phantasmagorical snakes, the rainbow serpent, snake-totems, and snake-related witches and ritual leaders, among others. In Eastern Africa, the meanings attributed to snakes were multifaceted and paradoxical. Overall, the two volumes of this publication show that African snake symbolism broadly echoed the diverse representations of ancient civilisations. The widely acknowledged assimilation of snakes to death and Evil is therefore unrepresentative, both historically and culturally.