• Study Magic with Me
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Books
    • BOOK: Your Faery Magic
    • BOOK: Gods and Goddesses of Wales
    • BOOK: All That Glitters
    • BOOK: TWISTED
    • BOOK: Folktales, Faeries, and Spirits
    • BOOK: Crimson Craft – sexual magic for the solo witch
    • BOOK: Storytelling for Magic
    • Resources for My Readers
  • Storytelling
  • Music
  • Poetry
  • Press
  • Podcast

Halo Quin

~ Author, storyteller, singer-songwriter, witch

Tag Archives: Moon Books

Book Review: Fairy Queens

21 Wednesday Feb 2024

Posted by Haloquin in Faery, Magic, review

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Book Review, Faery Queen, Fairy, fairy magic, Fairy Queen, Moon Books, Norse Goddess, Pagan, Pagan Author

This is a review of the Pagan Portals book: Fairy Queens by Morgan Daimler

Book Cover - Fairy Queens - Meeting the Queens of the Otherworld by Morgan Daimler - picture of a white lady with red hair in a red dress on a white horse, in front of a dark green tree.
Order Fairy Queens here

Morgan Daimler has a very different background to me, so it was fascinating to read about a few of the Irish and Scottish named Queens of Fairy.

Daimler, as ever, takes an academic starting point to tease out the threads of these powerful beings, exploring the etymology of their names – because names hold power. If we understand the meanings held in a name we can uncover the nature of the name-holder, and Daimler unpicks these tangles with skill and conciseness.

This book holds discussions of several specific Irish and Scottish Fairy Queens, including Nicnevin, Aine, Una, Mab and Titania as literary fairies, the Queen of Elfhame, and others, followed by guided meditations to meet several of them, and suggestions for how to decorate an altar to them, and offerings that each one might like.

I enjoyed the exploration of lore and legend surrounding these Queens, and the presentation of the different courts, and though I found the details of courtly hierarchy a little literal compared to my experience, I come from a different landscape and a different tradition. I did, however, very much appreciate Daimler’s sensible approach of urging manners and caution in engaging with these very real and powerful Ladies.

On a different note, the opening section also includes a thoughtful discussion on how to traverse in a magical journey if you are physically disabled and find that your disability travels with you, including the reminder that mobility aids can in themselves be spirits that travel with you, if you set things up that way.

There are many different traditions for working with the Fair Folk, and definitely different approaches to working with the Fairy Queens, (at least as many as there are Queens themselves, I suspect) and this is a great introduction to the particular Queens and relationship styles that Daimler works with, and has some excellent pointers for any interaction with the Queens of Fairy. Make space for them, mind your manners, bring a gift, and remember; they are real, powerful, wonderful, and entirely untamed. Just the way they should be.


Book Cover - Fairy Queens - Meeting the Queens of the Otherworld by Morgan Daimler - picture of a white lady with red hair in a red dress on a white horse, in front of a dark green tree.

You can order Fairy Queens by Morgan Daimler from your local indie bookshop, the usual place you get books, or directly from the publisher.

Order Fairy Queens here

(PS: Full disclosure, I’m published by Moon Books too, who sent me this to review. Find my books here.)

Book Review: Frigg

07 Wednesday Feb 2024

Posted by Haloquin in Magic, review

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Book Review, Frigg, Heathen, Heathenry, Moon Books, Norse Goddess, Pagan, Pagan Author

This is a review of the Pagan Portals book: Frigg, Beloved Queen of Asgard, by Ryan McClain

Book Cover - Frigg, Beloved Queen of Asgard, by Ryan McClain - with a stern fantasy viking woman depicted, head and shoulders, auburn hair and ornate fabric clothing with fine metalwork circlet
Order Frigg here

Frigg is one of those deities that I’ve met, and valued at a distance, but never really been close to having found myself swept up by her wandering husband, Odin, who I prayed to often during my 12 year self-sacrificing, initiatory, search for knowledge (otherwise called PhD studies), and Freyja who, well, is all the things I adore; magic, sensuality, passion, the vibrancy of the land…

But Frigg, Frigg’s domain and I have a tricky relationship. On the one hand I need to do those practical housekeeping things that Frigg rules over, and I know her stories and attributes, and absolutely respect her power and value. On the other, my ADHD brain means I’m sporadic at it at best and never really felt her presence as an actual goddess. It happens sometimes, we’re not going to resonate with every deity, even if we get on with their family, and I had accepted that this was the case.

So it was an absolute delight to read Ryan McClain’s book, or rather love letter, to the “Beloved Queen of Asgard” and come away with a sense of this powerful, important goddess, having glimpsed her in a new light.

McClain clearly adores Frigg, and in this book he shares a balanced blend of personal experience and lore-based research, recontextualising her, for me, as the Love that is Home.

This book is, as a Pagan Portal, only a brief introduction to Frigg, but it covers Early Sources, the Norse Record, her roles, symbols, and (importantly) relationships, all as keys and signposts to understanding her better. McClain also dedicates a chapter to her “Handmaidens”, those goddesses that carry her support and guidance through many different areas of life, and finally outlines ways in which you can begin to work with Frigg and her ladies.

I doubt she and I will ever be close, but I came away from this book with a new perspective on the Beloved Queen of Asgard, and a feeling that I’d, finally, been properly introduced.


Book Cover - Frigg, Beloved Queen of Asgard, by Ryan McClain - with a stern fantasy viking woman depicted, head and shoulders, auburn hair and ornate fabric clothing with fine metalwork circlet

You can order Frigg, Beloved Queen of Asgard by Ryan McClain from your local indie bookshop, the usual place you get books, or directly from the publisher.

Order Frigg here

(PS: Full disclosure, I’m published by Moon Books too, who sent me this to review. Find my books here.)

Imbolc, Inspiration, and Bardic Magic

31 Wednesday Jan 2024

Posted by Haloquin in Druidry, Following Delight, Magic, Music, My Books, Storytelling, Witchcraft 101

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Bard, Brigid, Ceridwen, Druidry, FAWM, Imbolc, Magic, Moon Books, Pagan, Pagan Author, Songwriting, Storytelling, Taliesin, Wheel of the Year, witchcraft

I finally submitted the last of the edits for my next book…

Storytelling for Magic!

A practical book calling on the skills of the bard as a storyteller, performer, and magic-weaver to make better magic. It includes techniques for finding, learning, and telling stories, transforming them into rituals, and sharing their magic with confidence, in your own style.

Perfect timing as tomorrow is Imbolc. And the start of February Album Writing Month (FAWM), a challenge to write 14 songs in February. I signed up last year and discovered a hugely supportive community, filled with so much inspiration and encouragement, that I actually wrote 16 songs!

Several of these made it into my first solo-singing show in December. One became my third released single, Two Wolves, No Masters. I think it’s safe to say that FAWM had an impact.

And as the FAWM community gears up to start again tomorrow, I’m noticing that it’s Imbolc eve.

Imbolc – the festival of the light breaking through the cold

Imbolc – the celebration of the first signs of spring

Imbolc – the day of Brigid, Bridie, Ffraid. Saint, Goddess, and Divine Power.

Brigid is considered to be a Goddess of Inspiration, of poets. (As well as healing, and forging/creativity)

So it struck me that this is brilliant timing for the month of FAWM!

I don’t work with Brigid often, but I’ll be lighting a candle for the two deities who most guided my book writing, Taliesin the bard and the goddess Ceridwen, whose cauldron brews all Inspiration. And I think I’ll say a few words for Brigid, as it’s her day too, and it never hurts to have deities of inspiration and creativity on your side.

You can find a talk on Storytelling As Magic on my Patreon as part of January’s Enchanted Circle, for this month only I’ve released the recording to the public – Patrons get to join me live, ask questions, and choose topics – as well as meditations, courses, and classes at different tiers! Go, watch, and sign up for more…

Find Storytelling as Magic Here

Two Book Reviews: “Reclaiming Witchcraft” & “Honouring the Wild”

08 Wednesday Feb 2023

Posted by Haloquin in Magic, review, Witchcraft 101

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

book, Book Review, Community, Friends, learn witchcraft, Moon Books, neo-paganism, Neopagan, New book, Pagan, paganism, Reclaiming, review

As a Reclaiming witch myself, when I saw Irisanya Moon had written a new book in the Pagan Portals series: “Reclaiming Witchcraft”, my first thought was “why didn’t I think of that?!” I’m glad I didn’t, though, as Irisanya has done such a wonderful job of sharing a sense of the workings that make Reclaiming what it is.

“Pagan Portals – Reclaiming Witchcraft” by Irisanya Moon (Moon Books, 2020) systematically shares about the parts of a tradition which grew out of a deep, activist, desire to bring magic to bear on the world for positive change. The origins and history of its roots in an activist collective, and its subsequent growth into a worldwide collective – anarchistic in that each witch is their own authority, and recognising that we always live within community.

Get your copy of “Reclaiming Witchcraft” here.

Through the Principles of Unity, Irisanya shares the guiding concepts of Reclaiming, and illustrates how we balance our independence and our collectivity. How do highly creative, anarchistic witches work in community? Through listening and developing structures through which each member can, when it works, be heard.

Irisanya touches on the ways in which we co-create Ecstatic, Improvisational, Ensemble, Inspired, and Organic rituals and magic. The Tools mentioned in the “Core Classes” give each witch both their own toolbox and shared points of magical development and ritual technology. And the concept of “Witchcamps” is discussed too, between the ritual style, the tools, and the Witchcamps, Reclaiming has an unusual and effective system of magic and community development. All of which feed back into creating change in the world.

As a tradition with 40+ years of history now, the question of how different generations are included is an important one, and one Irisanya handles gently and with compassion… Because a world of community must have space for all the family!

The final chapter on Magical Activism speaks to the desire that underpins Reclaiming Witchcraft… To make the world a better, fairer, place, and a home for us all.

This topic is one that Irisanya then went on to expand in “Earth Spirit – Honoring the Wild – Reclaiming Witchcraft and Environmental Activism” (Moon Books: 2023), which, as a book on collective action, includes a myriad of voices, some of whom are friends of mine!

My activism is a quiet one, I marched against the Iraq war in the early 2000s, handing out fliers, calling for peace (or at the very least, honesty) and found that wasn’t the path for me. But I see the state of the world too, so I often feel like I should be doing more. This book helped remind me that there are as many ways of helping to change the world, of being an activist, as there are witches. That doing my bit in my own life and working to lift spirits and share tools is valuable too.

Stories from disabled witches, from teachers, from people determined to help, and from the front lines of history.

A discussion of how magic, and a magical worldview, can help us motivate ourselves. Rituals and blessings. Tips for encouraging younger generations to engage.

All of these things offer hope.

Hope because we are not alone in caring.

Hope because those successes, those actions do help.

Hope because we can be activists, just as we are, when we offer our imperfect offerings. And perhaps we, too, can be inspired to help change the world for the better. A spell at a time.

Buy “Honoring the Wild” here.

Find more of Irisanya’s work here.

And learn more about Reclaiming here.

Banner for online independent bookstore, "Quin's Books"

PS: This post contains affiliate links, which means that if you buy books through them the website gives me a little commission, which helps support me at no extra cost to you. So… Thank you!

OUT NOW! Crimson Craft – sexual magic for the solo witch

27 Friday Jan 2023

Posted by Haloquin in Crimson Craft, Magic, My Books, Witchcraft 101

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Divine Erotic, Iron Pentacle, learn magic, learn witchcraft, Magic, Moon Books, New book, Pagan, Pagan Author, Sex, Sex Magic, witchcraft

My new book of sexual magic is out!!! This is the longest book I’ve written to date, and I’m so proud of it. It is a work of healing, of magic, of embodied, sensual, loving, witchcraft. If you’re looking for an inclusive, gentle guide to uncovering your own inner sexual power, exploring ritual and creative ways of healing and becoming more embodied, and of opening the possibility of deep, devotional connection with the Divine… then Crimson Craft was written for you.

Crimson Craft felt both vulnerable and deeply healing to write, to share the ways in which I’ve healed myself, built relationship with the divine, and tapped deeper into my own inner power through pleasure and embracing the erotic. I deliberately wrote it for a solo practitioner because this is one key way we can reclaim our own personal authority, and take responsibility for something that is so often presented as dependent on others (with their own needs, challenges, wounds). But also to make it inclusive, to offer up these tools and processes to people of all and any gender and genitalia, because, honestly, sexual magic goes much further than what might be in our pants.

As living, embodied beings we are capable of great pleasure, and the magic that arises from being alive. In this, the power of eros is our ultimate guide.

(Crimson Craft can be found in all the normal places for buying books. The links in this post are affiliate links that support independent bookstores across the UK. Your local bookstore will also be able to order it in!)
Crimson Craft – Get your copy Here!

Crimson Craft is not your normal sex magic book, rather than focusing on the casting spells powered by orgasmic energy (though that definitely gets included!), this book takes us deeper into healing the perceived split between body and mind, opening up greater power and magic for use in all our witchcraft.

It also discusses working with deities of love and passion in building loving relationships with one’s self and one’s gods, the foundations of ecstatic mystical union, and the shadow work of facing cultural and personal taboos.

And it lays the foundation for self-love, which is a fundamental act of rebellious magic in a world that would rather keep us small.

Halo has created a safe space for anyone who wants to explore their own nature as a sexual being. This is an invitation to be open to healing, sacredness, wonder, spirituality and magic. It’s a deeply affirming and inclusive book full of things to explore and the affirmation that exploring is something you are entitled to do… Get it right, and sex can be magic, and mystery, wonder and sacredness. We have in ourselves, and between us, a capacity to make beauty and joy. That should be honoured and celebrated.

– from a review by Nimue Brown, read the whole thing here
Crimson Craft – Out Now!

Rediscover the sacred nature of sex, pleasure, and the divine erotic in Halo Quin’s Crimson Craft, a guide for sexual magic and a tool for personal healing, spell-casting, and devotional practices in witchcraft. By theorizing the ethics of embodiment and pleasure within these practices, Quin provides exploratory exercises (and tips for taking them further, and safely, with a partner) . Crimson Craft includes an introduction not only to archetypes, deities, and divine powers but also to the context and benefits of using kink in ritual and creative writing, inviting you – the witch and magic-worker – to deepen your understanding of sexual magic’s possibilities and sweetness.

~ from the official blurb

Words: Crimson Coven, arching over half a red rose blossom

Alongside the book, I have opened up a space for people to come together who want to explore and discuss, ritually, creatively, and respectfully, their journeys with the magic of embodiment and pleasure. In the Crimson Coven Collective there are discussion/journal prompts, creative inspiration, healing rituals, and mutual support.

On Monday 30th January we’ll be kicking off the live online events with a Book launch party and ritual, and then, on the full Moon, Sunday 5th February, we’ll gather for a healing Imbolc ritual. Come and join us to be a part of this magical collective!

Discover the Crimson Coven Collective

Thank you for joining me on this magical, healing, journey, in whatever way is right for you.

It is my honour, as always, to share my soul’s work with the people who choose to engage with an open heart.

May your journey be blessed, and your heart be healed.

In delight,

~Halo

PS: You can join my mailing list here for a free Crimson Craft gift, occasional updates and to get my posts in your inbox, just click here.

Find the Crimson Craft Book Here
Join the Crimson Coven Collective Here

Book Review: Intuitive Magical Practice

12 Friday Nov 2021

Posted by Haloquin in Magic, review

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

book, Book Review, Intuition, Magic, Moon Books, Pagan

This is a sweet book with lots of thoughts about intuition and examples from the author’s own practice and life. It is very much a sharing from the heart of a personal practice, with a lot of vulnerability and plenty of inspiration. And I love how it weaves the elements so deeply through all of the chapters, and makes intuitive magic so accessible.

This is the kind of book that you really need a highlighter app for (or those little translucent sticky notes!) to mark the things that jump out at you so you can go back and try them, as it is filled with examples and ideas throughout the prose, and they’re sometimes easy to miss. Little gems in a hoard of treasure! 

Clarke has faith in her readers to already apply their intuitive understanding of the world, leading to the potential for people to improve their intuition by handing the details over to their spirit/deep self. For example, the expectation that readers can just “raise that vibration” in themselves, without explanation, assumes a lot of skills, but since these are natural skills that we can all do, if the reader simply places their trust in the author and does without thinking, there’s a good chance they’ll do well. 

Image Description: Intuitive Magical Practice viewed from above with a pot of tea, because is is cosy like a cuppa.
(Image Description: Intuitive Magical Practice viewed from above with a pot of tea, because is is cosy like a cuppa.)

I don’t agree with everything in this book, and the gendering of intuition does not sit well with me personally. In the introduction Clarke says her primary audience is women, and explicitly writes her material for women in chapter 15, so that’s worth bearing in mind if you’re, well, not. That’s not to say there isn’t beautiful, useful material in the chapter though. Personally it seems weird to me to gender a human ability that everyone has, but as the author is writing from her perspective and personal practice with intuition and the divine feminine it makes sense, and there is still a need for space for women to heal that piece of themselves so it is an important chapter for that. 

So in short: “Intuitive Magical Practice” by Natalia Clarke is a sweet, open hearted sharing of intuitive practices within a pagan perspective, primarily aimed at women, working particularly with the elements and the divine feminine. It is packed with inspiration and personal experiences, to really show how intuition can be integrated into one’s pagan practice.

~~~

Buy a copy from Quin’s Books here! (affiliate link)

Or you can order your copy from your local bookstore, or directly from the publisher here.

Please Note: I was given a copy of this book to review by the publisher.

(c) Halo Quin ~ author, storyteller, witch

Re-enchanting the world, one story, one song, one spell, at a time.

The Enchanted Academy - learn real magic - click here

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Halo Quin
    • Join 133 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Halo Quin
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...