The Witch's Market

The Witch's Market
Author: Mingmei Yip
Publisher: Kensington Books
Total Pages: 370
Release: 2015-12-01
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1617733245

From the author of Secret of a Thousand Beauties and Peach Blossom Pavilion comes a beautifully written novel of self-discovery and intrigue. Chinese-American assistant professor Eileen Chen specializes in folk religion at her San Francisco college. Though her grandmother made her living as a shamaness, Eileen publicly dismisses witchcraft as mere superstition. Yet privately, the subject intrigues her. When a research project takes her to the Canary Islands—long rumored to be home to real witches—Eileen is struck by the lush beauty of Tenerife and its blend of Spanish and Moroccan culture. A stranger invites her to a local market where women sell amulets, charms, and love spells. Gradually Eileen immerses herself in her exotic surroundings, finding romance with a handsome young furniture maker. But as she learns more about the lives of these self-proclaimed witches, Eileen must choose how much trust to place in this new and seductive world, where love, greed, and vengeance can be as powerful, or as destructive, as any magic.

Witch Craft

Witch Craft
Author: Caitlin Kittredge
Publisher: St. Martin's Paperbacks
Total Pages: 349
Release: 2009-09-01
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1429929464

Someone, or something, is setting fire to the homes of the city's most infamous non-humans, racking up a body count that's growing by the day. And strange, otherworldly creatures no one has seen before—selkies trolls and harpies—are causing chaos throughout the city. Racing to stop the carnage, Luna turns to sexy federal agent Will Fagin for help. As they work to uncover the source of the bloodshed, Luna's attraction for Will deepens. But just as she learns Will's darkest secret, Nocturne City is thrust into total chaos—leaving Luna and Will in a path of destruction they may not be able to stop...or survive.

The Kitchen Witch

The Kitchen Witch
Author: Annette Blair
Publisher: Penguin
Total Pages: 324
Release: 2004-10-05
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1101204737

When a single-dad TV executive hires Melody Seabright--a flaky rich girl and rumored witch--as his babysitter, she magically lands her own cooking show...and makes sparks fly.

The Star Witch

The Star Witch
Author: Linda Winstead Jones
Publisher: Penguin
Total Pages: 340
Release: 2006
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780425201282

Searching for the elusive Star of Baewyr, Captain Lucan Hern, a virile warrior, is distracted from his mission by an encounter with Isadora, the young, widowed attendant to the Empress, who holds the key to what he is looking for, yet captivates him with her innocence. Original.

Gone with the Witch

Gone with the Witch
Author: Annette Blair
Publisher: Penguin
Total Pages: 308
Release: 2008
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780425221211

In order to save a helpless child somehow linked to Aiden McCloud, psychic bad girl Storm Cartwright sets a seductive trap for the antiques restorer that backfires when the magic of love interferes with her plans.

Love and the Market

Love and the Market
Author: Rob Faure Walker
Publisher: Policy Press
Total Pages: 190
Release: 2024-09-17
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 152924367X

Love is fundamental to the flourishing of society and nature. However, the competition of the market economy has resulted in a fractured and traumatized modern world. Revisiting philosophical developments and countercultures since the Enlightenment, this book offers a ‘loving critique’. It shows how learning to love better is the key to releasing ourselves from the alienating grip of the market. The utopian template presented draws on archaeology, the witch trials, hippies, Hinduism, Buddhism, quantum mechanics and psychedelics to describe how we can build a more loving society that can survive and flourish through the ecological, ethical, economic and existential crises that we all now face.

The Intestines of the State

The Intestines of the State
Author: Nicolas Argenti
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 387
Release: 2008-09-15
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0226026132

The young people of the Cameroon Grassfields have been subject to a long history of violence and political marginalization. For centuries the main victims of the slave trade, they became prime targets for forced labor campaigns under a series of colonial rulers. Today’s youth remain at the bottom of the fiercely hierarchical and polarized societies of the Grassfields, and it is their response to centuries of exploitation that Nicolas Argenti takes up in this absorbing and original book. Beginning his study with a political analysis of youth in the Grassfields from the eighteenth century to the present, Argenti pays special attention to the repeated violent revolts staged by young victims of political oppression. He then combines this history with extensive ethnographic fieldwork in the Oku chiefdom, discovering that the specter of past violence lives on in the masked dance performances that have earned intense devotion from today’s youth. Argenti contends that by evoking the imagery of past cataclysmic events, these masquerades allow young Oku men and women to address the inequities they face in their relations with elders and state authorities today.

The Witch Haven

The Witch Haven
Author: Sasha Peyton Smith
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 464
Release: 2022-08-30
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 153445439X

Whisked away to Haxahaven Academy for Witches in 1911, seventeen-year-old Frances Hallowell soon finds herself torn between aligning herself with Haxahaven's foes, the Sons of St. Druon, to solve her brother's murder or saving Manhattan and her fellow witches.

Anthropos

Anthropos
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 728
Release: 2007
Genre: Anthropology
ISBN:

Dialogue and the Interpretation of Illness

Dialogue and the Interpretation of Illness
Author: Robert Pool
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 298
Release: 2020-08-19
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1000325067

The etiology of the Wimbum people in the Western Grassfields of Cameroon is described through an examination of the way in which the meanings of key concepts, used to interpret and explain illness and other forms of misfortune, are continually being produced and reproduced in the praxis of everyday communication. During the course of numerous dialogues, witchcraft, a highly ambivalent force, gradually emerges as the prime mover. As destructive cannibals or respectable elders the witches are the ultimate cause of all significant illness, misfortune and death, and as diviners they are also the ultimate judges who apportion moral responsibility. Even the ancestors and the traditional gods turn out to be fronts behind which the witches hide their activities.The study is on three levels: a medical anthropological exploration of explanations of illness and misfortune; a detailed ethnography of traditional African cosmology and witchcraft; and an examination of recent theoretical issues in anthropology such as the nature of ethnographic fieldwork and the possibility of dialogical or postmodern ethnography.