
Welsh Witchcraft
Enter a world of sacred lakes, healing herbs, spectral hounds, and the mighty red dragon. Written by a Welsh practitioner, this inspiring book shares the magical traditions of Wales—including fairies, folklore, and charms—with dozens of hands-on activities.

Song of the Dark Man
Exploring mythology, folklore, occult writings, and modern accounts, Darragh Mason challenges the simplistic concept of the Devil as “evil,” explaining how encounters with this entity can reveal one’s life purpose and how the Dark Man can be an initiator into witchcraft.

The Power of the Healing Field
Drawing on esoteric tradition as well as scientific research, such as Rupert Sheldrake’s morphic field studies, the author maps out the human energy field in all its subtleties, providing diagrams of the human energy body, the spectrum of states of awareness, the multilayered fields of consciousness, and the psychoenergetic dynamics of the transformation process.

Ritual & Epiphany in the Mysteries of Mithras
Ritual & Epiphany in the Mysteries of Mithras takes readers deep into the heart of the Mithraic mysteries, offering a profound exploration of the cult’s ritual practices and transformative visionary experiences.

The Icelandic & Swedish Rune Poems
In this second entry in a planned three part series covering all of the rune poems, Danish scholar Mathias Nordvig (University of Colorado Boulder) translates and discusses the Icelandic and Swedish rune poems.

Lady Elder Tree
No other plant is more associated with witchcraft in parts of northern and western Europe than the elder tree (Sambucus nigra).

The Folk of the Mountain Door
Alongside Morris's two innovative fantasy novels is a third, stranger work: The Folk of the Mountain Door, an unfinished book he worked on until his death in 1896.

Dark Forest Longing
Although today largely unknown in the English-speaking world, few authors in history can match the potent and uncanny darkness conjured by the early German romanticist Johann Ludwig Tieck

The Roots of the Mountain Parts I & II
One of the most influential novels ever written but today quite obscure and rarely in print, English polymath William Morris’s The Roots of the Mountains may well be the first true modern fantasy fiction novel.

The Elder Futhark
The Elder Futhark is a unique alphabet developed and used by speakers of early Germanic languages in large areas of Europe.

The Comparative Hávamál
Widely celebrated and referenced in popular culture as a literary treasure and even achieving the status of holy scripture in some contemporary new religious movements

The Galdrabók: Forbidden Icelandic Folk Magic
Once forbidden by the church on penalty of severe punishment and even death, Iceland’s occult symbols have been subject to a remarkable transformation over the past few decades

The Comparative Völuspá
Originating in Viking Age Scandinavia but containing elements of much earlier origin, no poem in the Old Norse corpus is more celebrated than the harrowing masterpiece Völuspá, the 'prophecy of the völva', a type of seeress esteemed in the pagan period comparable to contemporary notions of a witch.

Hekate Ochetos
Harper Feist shares her profound journey of ritual and revelation as she receives a unique epithet from her guiding deity.

She of the Night (forthcoming)
She of the Night stands as a monumental achievement—a true magnum opus born from over a decade of focused dedication and many more years of spiritual practice in honour of the Great Queen Lilith.

Betwixt God and the Devil
Richard Ward’s book ‘Betwixt God and the Devil’ was born of a lifelong interest in the folk magic traditions of his native Essex, an area long known as 'The Witch County.’ as such, it is key to the history and development of modern traditional Witchcraft.

Song of Hathor (forthcoming)
For millennia, the enigmatic rituals and spiritual practices of Ancient Egypt have captivated and inspired seekers of wisdom. Now, for the first time, Song of Hathor unveils a comprehensive guide to the authentic ceremonial and magical traditions of this ancient civilization.

A Complete System of Magic: The Manual of a Nineteenth-Century British Cunning Man
Few examples of the manuals of the 19th century cunning folk survive, although these magicians were very much a vital part of British culture at the time.
This is the grimoire of William Dawson Bellhouse, a cunning man active in Liverpool and Leeds in the mid-nineteenth century who sought to transform lives with electricity and magic.

Spirit Chaser
Originally published in 2012, this new edition of Spirit Chaser features a foreword by Ogham Grove author and prolific Glastonbury artist, Yuri Leitch. Plus, a brand-new preface, some amendments and new information by the Author.

The Black Toad
The Black Toad explores potent examples of the folk-ceremonial magical practices and witchcraft of the south-west of England; dealing especially with Devon and the author’s homeland of Cornwall.