Wednesday, December 28, 2016

Books for Pagan Children: Parenting (P)

It can be difficult to find books for your Pagan children to read. You want books that teach them your values, and maybe something close to your beliefs and traditions.

I have compiled a list of good books by great authors. Many are outright Pagan. Some are Pagan in flavor or Pagan-friendly. I am noting when the author is Pagan to encourage support of Pagan authors and artists.

Previous




  • Pagan Degrees for Children by Shanddaramon (Non-Fiction) *PAGAN*
    This book provides a system of learning Pagan and good living concepts just for children and young adults through three main degrees. Children from the ages of 5 - 18 can work on obtaining the Neophyte, Apprentice, and Mage Degrees by meeting specific goals designed for children and by completing the requirements for earning Achievement Awards. The Neophyte Degree is subdivided into several Levels to help give young children small and easily obtainable goals. Provided with each Degree and Award is a great deal of information and sources for learning and for exploring.

  • Pagan Family, The: Handing the Old Ways Down by Ceisiwr Serith (Non-Fiction) *PAGAN*
    "The Pagan Family" provides general advice for Pagans who wished to celebrate their religion as a family on the construction of rituals, as well as ritual guidelines for weddings, births, birthdays, seasonal celebrations, lunar phases, coming of age, divorce and death. The book also contains suggestions for the creation of the sacred home (including blessings and household shrines); activities for children such as meditations, mask and rattle making, drumming and storytelling; suggested prayers for throughout the day; tips for teaching children about paganism. References and resources for further information are included in the appendices.

  • Pagan Homeschooling by Kristin Madden (Non-Fiction) *PAGAN*
    Pagan Homeschooling is the first book to address the needs of families, and this hands-on manual is packed with resources, checklists, questionnaires, exercises, arts and crafts, experiments, spells, rituals, and more.


  • Parenting Pagan Tots by Janet Callahan (Non-Fiction) *PAGAN*
    Parenting Pagan Tots is for parents of infants, toddlers, and preschoolers. Ms. Callahan, a mother of two young children, includes many details on ways to build a tradition specifically for your family, while including the youngest members, while also talking about considerations for things like handling mainstream media and other people's holidays.









Sunday, December 25, 2016

Books for Pagan Children: Middle School/Tween (S-W)

It can be difficult to find books for your Pagan children to read. You want books that teach them your values, and maybe something close to your beliefs and traditions.

I have compiled a list of good books by great authors. Many are outright Pagan. Some are Pagan in flavor or Pagan-friendly. I am noting when the author is Pagan to encourage support of Pagan authors and artists.

Previous



  • Seasons of Magic: A Girl's Journey by Laurel Ann Reinhardt (Fiction)
    As Erin watches the Wheel of the Year turn, she discovers that the changing seasons also mirror changes in her relationship with her inner self and those around her. This heartwarming tale of one girl's magical journey will delight readers of all ages. Along the way you will discover lessons about Imbolc (February 2, a time of returning light); Spring Equinox (March 20, promises of spring); Beltaine (May 1, the sowing of seeds); Summer Solstice (June 21, the fullness of summer); Lammas (August 2, the first harvest); Fall Equinox (September 21, the full harvest); Samhain (October 31, the season of ancestors); and Yule (December 21, a celebration of the darkness of winter).  Seasons of Magic also includes a journal with questions to help you further explore the seasonal festivals and design your own celebrations.

  • Spellcraft: a Primer for the Young Magician by Lilith McLelland (Non-Fiction)
    A book of magical empowerment for kids and young teens, SPELLCRAFT tells you how to tap into your own magical powers to improve your life and give you confidence -- safely and easily. It covers the basics of magic and meditation, teaches you how to get in touch with your inner powers, and what magic really is. You'll explore spells for homework, for controlling your temper, for personal protection, spells to shield yourself from bad energy, and more. You'll also learn about magical colors, crystals and herbs, making magic charms and wands, working with guardian spirits, and earth magic. Most importantly, you'll learn about people, spirits and techniques to avoid! This is an easy-to-understand book, designed to help kids develop a sense of personal power and the responsibility that goes with it.



  • Witch Crafts: 101 Projects for Creative Pagans by Willow Polson (Activity)
    Whether you're a novice crafter into Norse lore or a practicing Pagan in need of personal tips on Celtic leatherwork, this handy, easy-to-use book will charm you and your entire family. The enchanting designs represent authentic Pagan lore and culture, and can be used for both practical and sacred purposes. Learn how to make a variety of unique items to delight all the senses.

  • Witch of Blackbird Pond, The by Elizabeth George Speare (Fiction)
    Orphaned Kit Tyler knows, as she gazes for the first time at the cold, bleak shores of Connecticut Colony, that her new home will never be like the shimmering Caribbean island she left behind. In her relatives' stern Puritan community, she feels like a tropical bird that has flown to the wrong part of the world, a bird that is now caged and lonely. The only place where Kit feels completely free is in the meadows, where she enjoys the company of the old Quaker woman known as the Witch of Blackbird Pond, and on occasion, her young sailor friend Nat. But when Kit's friendship with the "witch" is discovered, Kit is faced with suspicion, fear, and anger. She herself is accused of witchcraft!

Wednesday, December 21, 2016

Books for Pagan Children: Parenting (M-N)

It can be difficult to find books for your Pagan children to read. You want books that teach them your values, and maybe something close to your beliefs and traditions.

I have compiled a list of good books by great authors. Many are outright Pagan. Some are Pagan in flavor or Pagan-friendly. I am noting when the author is Pagan to encourage support of Pagan authors and artists.

Previous



  • Magickal Crafts by Kristin Madden (Non-Fiction) *PAGAN*
    Make unique crafts for the eight Neopagan holidays and lunar phases. Craft sacred spaces, magical tools, oracles and altar pieces. Experiment with meditations, spells and other magical exercises. Create special gifts and mouth-watering delicacies for handfastings, baby blessings, adulthood celebrations and more. Design and wear ritual and fun garb, as well as body oils and henna body art. Contains dozens of photos to guide you through the projects. Perfect for crafty Wiccans, Pagans, Druids and all others who walk the Earth's path.

  • Moonbeam: A Book of Meditations for Children by Maureen Garth (Activity)
    Maureen Garth′s popular meditations for children were born out of the author′s desire to help her three-year-old daughter sleep soundly. Developing ′the gentle art of going within′, her delightful stories helped her child - and many others around the world - to feel secure and to sleep peacefully. In Moonbeam, Garth invites her readers to accompany her on journeys into an imaginative world of animals, people and places. 

  • Nature's Children: Celebrating the Seasons in a Pagan Family by Rachel Mayatt (Non-Fiction) *PAGAN*
    An excellent book on seasonal celebrations that include children. Rites of passage and seasonal celebrations are included as are thoughts on the wider aspects of bringing up children in a Pagan family. Ideas and suggestions can easily be picked out and adapted to suit particular situations.










Sunday, December 18, 2016

Books for Pagan Children: Middle School/Tween (G-R)

It can be difficult to find books for your Pagan children to read. You want books that teach them your values, and maybe something close to your beliefs and traditions.

I have compiled a list of good books by great authors. Many are outright Pagan. Some are Pagan in flavor or Pagan-friendly. I am noting when the author is Pagan to encourage support of Pagan authors and artists.

Previous



  • Grimoire for the Apprentice Wizard by Oberon Zell-Ravenheart (Non-Fiction) *PAGAN*
    This amazing book is an essential reference and permanent resource for every aspirant. It is illustrated with original art by Oberon and friends, as well as hundred of woodcuts from medieval manuscripts and alchemical texts--plus, charts, tables and diagrams.

  • If Stones Could Speak: Unlocking the Secrets of Stonehenge by Marc Aronson (Non-Fiction)
    What are the secrets of the ancient stone circle? Were the carefully placed stones a burial site, an ancient calendar, a place of Druid worship...or even a site of sacrifice? World-renowned archaeologist Mike Parker-Pearson has spent the last seven years on a quest to answer these and many other questions. In If Stones Could Speak, award-winning author Marc Aronson joins the research crew and records their efforts to crack Stonehenge’s secrets. National Geographic helped sponsor the Riverside archeological team’s mission, and now young readers can journey behind the scenes to experience this groundbreaking story first-hand, through the eyes of the experts.

  • Mabinogion Tetralogy by Evangeline Walton (Myths)
    The Mabinogion is internationally recognized as the world's finest arc of Celtic mythology; Walton's vivid retelling introduces an ancient world of gods and monsters, heroes, kings and quests, making accessible one of the greatest fantasy sagas of all time.


  • Return of the Light, The: Twelve Tales from Around the World for the Winter Solstice by Carolyn McVickar Edwards (Myths)
    Celebrating the solstices - particularly the moment of the sun's return at midwinter, on December 21 - is a nearly universal human urge, one that dates back thousands of years and has been identified in a wide variety of cultures. Now The Return of the Light makes an ideal companion for all who carry on this tradition, no matter what their faith. Twelve stories - from North America, China, Scandinavia, India, Africa, South America, Europe, and Polynesia - honour this moment, helping to renew our wonder of the miracle of rebirth and the power of transition from darkness into light.



Wednesday, December 14, 2016

Books for Pagan Children: Parenting (G)

It can be difficult to find books for your Pagan children to read. You want books that teach them your values, and maybe something close to your beliefs and traditions.

I have compiled a list of good books by great authors. Many are outright Pagan. Some are Pagan in flavor or Pagan-friendly. I am noting when the author is Pagan to encourage support of Pagan authors and artists.

Previous







  • Goddess Is in the Details, The: Wisdom for the Everyday Witch by Deborah Blake (Non-Fiction)
    With her signature down-to-earth wisdom and warmth, Deborah Blake takes you into the heart of what it means to be a Witch all day, every day. Filled to the brim with practical suggestions, Pagan and Wicca spells, and helpful advice, this essential book brings to light all facets of a modern Witch's life: The seven core beliefs of Witches, mindful eating and health, creating sacred space at home, relationships with non-Pagans, sex and the single Witch, raising Pagan children, solitary and coven practice, Pagan ritual, and green living.






Sunday, December 11, 2016

Books for Pagan Children: Middle School/Tween (D-F)

It can be difficult to find books for your Pagan children to read. You want books that teach them your values, and maybe something close to your beliefs and traditions.

I have compiled a list of good books by great authors. Many are outright Pagan. Some are Pagan in flavor or Pagan-friendly. I am noting when the author is Pagan to encourage support of Pagan authors and artists.

Previous



  • Dark Is Rising Sequence, The: Over Sea, Under Stone; The Dark Is Rising; Greenwitch;The Grey King; Silver on the Tree by Susan Cooper (Fantasy)
    Will Stanton’s life is shattered with the revelation that the Dark—the source of all evil—is rising in its last and greatest bid to control the world. He finds that he is no ordinary boy, but the last-born of the Old Ones. Will is swept up in the great battle, along with his ageless master, Merriman; the three Drew children; and a strange boy named Bran. These six fight fear and death in a quest through time and space interwoven with the most ancient myths of the islands of Britain—until, at last, Will and Bran find the weapon that will ultimately vanquish the Dark.


  • Dragonology: The Complete Book of Dragons by Dr. Ernest Drake (Fantasy)
    Do you believe in dragons? Now, for the first time, the long-lost research of renowned nineteenth century dragonologist Dr. Ernest Drake is presented in all its eccentric glory, happily bridging the gap between dragon legend and fact. The meticulous Dr. Drake assigns Latin names to various dragon species, ruminates on why dragons are able to speak, speculates on how they could fly, and explains the true purpose of their notorious hoarding habits.

  • Faerie's Tale, A (The Eyedore Trilogy Book 1) by SR Hollands (Fantasy)
    Cast out into the human world and branded a thief, Willow a woman of the Faerie realm is unable to return home. Without assistance she will perish and her lands and property will be taken from her. Abducted by those who would do her harm she is followed back into her own world by her human allies who assist in claiming back her family heritage. Danger and the threat of death are never far away and only perseverance and a little luck will see them through.

  • Fearless Girls, Wise Women, and Beloved Sisters: Heroines in Folktales from Around the World by Kathleen Ragan (Myths)
    Dismayed by the predominance of male protagonists and heroes in her daughters' books, the author set out to collect the stories of forgotten heroines: courageous mothers, clever young girls and warrior women who save villages from monsters, rule wisely over kingdoms and outwit judges, kings and tigers. Gathered from around the world, from regions as diverse as sub-Saharan Africa and Western Europe, from Native American cultures and New World settlers, from Asia and the Middle East, these one hundred folk tales celebrate strong heroines.

  • Field Guide to Fairies, A: Explore the Secret World of the Fairy Realm by Susannah Marriott (Fantasy)
    Boys and girls will be spellbound as they explore the origins and the legends of fairies in this spectacularly beautiful volume. Lavish illustrations show the fairies of meadows and fields, of lakes and rivers, and of air and wind. Here too are magical depictions of tree fairies, house fairies, ocean and sea fairies, all of them shown in their traditional, richly illustrated environments. An enchanting picture book, A Field Guide to Fairies presents a series of beautiful full-color spreads, each bewitching illustration captioned with a description of its fairy's origins in legendry and its relationship to nature. Among these hauntingly beautiful color depictions of fairies are three impressive double-page pop-up scenes. The book's heavy board front cover is die-cut to reveal the enchanting fairy illustration that adorns the title page.

Wednesday, December 7, 2016

Books for Pagan Children: Parenting (C-F)

It can be difficult to find books for your Pagan children to read. You want books that teach them your values, and maybe something close to your beliefs and traditions.

I have compiled a list of good books by great authors. Many are outright Pagan. Some are Pagan in flavor or Pagan-friendly. I am noting when the author is Pagan to encourage support of Pagan authors and artists.





  • Celebrating the Great Mother: A Handbook of Earth-Honoring Activities for Parents and Children by Cait Johnson (Non-Fiction) *PAGAN*
    Adults have a wide array of books to help explore earth-based spirituality. But what if they want to include their children? Here is a handbook to help parents, caregivers, teachers, and counselors create meaningful spiritual experiences that will inspire children of all ages. The ideas, suggestions, and activities collected here show how to bring children into rituals that celebrate seasonal cycles and help reclaim the spiritual roots of today's modern holidays.

  • Children of the Green: Raising our Kids in Pagan Traditions by Dr. Hannah E. Johnston (Non-Fiction) *PAGAN*
    Children of the Green is an in-depth consideration of child raising from within pagan spirituality. Written by a long-time pagan witch, educator and parent, it considers the deeper questions of raising children within pagan spirituality, and the building of community for pagan families. Taking a unique approach, Children of the Green focuses not solely on sharing the festivals and celebratory cycles of paganism, but also discusses the moral, ethical and practical issues of raising kids as pagans; from working with schools, handling family changes and crises, child development from a pagan perspective and facing the challenges of a changing world.

  • Children's Pagan Program (CPP) Guide: All-in-One Pagan Studies for Children by One Tree International (Non-Fiction)
    The All-in-One Pagan Studies for Children: Children’s Pagan Program (CPP) Guide volume includes definitions used in pagan and neo-pagan traditions as well as a sample curriculum and sample forms that will aid the teacher in setting up their program. This text is intended for the teacher(s) and not directly for the student. This text is ideal for the pagan parent looking to educate their child, the pagan teacher conducting group pagan instruction for children, or for the teacher in both public and private schools looking to educate the lay public in pagan studies.

  • Earthlight by Maureen Garth (Activity)
    Countless parents, teachers, and other carers for children have discovered the benefits of Maureen Garth′s unique approach to meditation. Her simple but imaginative stories lead children into magical worlds in which they are released from fears, discover peacefulness and stillness, and experience wonder-filled adventures.

  • Family Wicca: Revised and Expanded Edition by Ashleen O'Gaea (Non-Fiction)
    More than 10 years ago, it was the first book written specifically for Wiccan parents. Now it's the 21st century's best reference for the still growing number of neo-Pagan parents who want to introduce their children to the principles of their religion. Like Ashleen's other books, it's written from her perspective as a Wiccan, but it's easy for other pagan traditions to "translate" and use, too. In Family Wicca, priestess, wife, and mother Ashleen O'Gaea offers encouragement, shares her own family's experiences, discusses real-life challenges and how to deal with them, and provides a wealth of simple rituals and inexpensive projects that will enhance your family's life in every way.




Sunday, December 4, 2016

Books for Pagan Children: Middle School/Tween (A-C)

It can be difficult to find books for your Pagan children to read. You want books that teach them your values, and maybe something close to your beliefs and traditions.

I have compiled a list of good books by great authors. Many are outright Pagan. Some are Pagan in flavor or Pagan-friendly. I am noting when the author is Pagan to encourage support of Pagan authors and artists.





  • Animal Totem Mandala Coloring Book: Art Nouveau Creatures and Reflections for Relaxation by Wendy Martin (Activity) *PAGAN*
    The Animal Totem Mandala Adult Coloring Book with Reflections for Relaxation is an Art Nouveau adult coloring book featuring 30 of the world’s most beloved animals to color: Wolf, Lion, Snake, Porcupine, Bat, Honey Bee, Elephant, Swan, Horse, Peacock, Octopus, Pig, Turtle, Buffalo, Panda, Raven, Luna Moth, Mouse, Monkey, Salamander, Owl, Rabbit, Moose, Seal, Hen, Alligator, Spider, Stingray and Fox. Each can be filled in with your favorite coloring medium: crayon, paint, watercolor, sharpie or pencil.The Animal Totem Mandala coloring book is exquisitely drawn by award-winning artist and COVR finalist Wendy Martin.

  • Children of Odin, The: The Book of Northern Myths by Padraic Colum (Fantasy)
    Before time as we know it began, gods and goddesses lived in the city of Asgard. Odin All Father crossed the Rainbow Bridge to walk among men in Midgard. Thor defended Asgard with his mighty hammer. Mischievous Loki was constantly getting into trouble with the other gods, and dragons and giants walked free. This collection of Norse sagas retold by author Padraic Colum gives us a sense of that magical time when the world was filled with powers and wonders we can hardly imagine.

  • Coloring Book of Ancient Egypt, A (Activity)
    This coloring book includes art from the earliest kings through three thousand years to Cleopatra. There are animals at play, gods and goddesses, ships, dancers, and scenes of Egyptians at work and sport.

  • Companion for the Apprentice Wizard by Oberon Zell-Ravenheart (Non-Fiction) *PAGAN*
    Oberon Zell-Ravenheart shares magickal practices in his new book Companion for the Apprentice Wizard. Unlike his first best-selling book, Grimoire for the Apprentice Wizard which focused on the lessons one must learn to become a Wizard, Oberon focuses on taking you to the next level by putting those lessons to use with hands-on magickal training.








Sunday, November 27, 2016

Books for Pagan Children: Elementary (T-Z)

Previous

It can be difficult to find books for your Pagan children to read. You want books that teach them your values, and maybe something close to your beliefs and traditions.

I have compiled a list of good books by great authors. Many are outright Pagan. Some are Pagan in flavor or Pagan-friendly. I am noting when the author is a confirmed Pagan to encourage support of Pagan authors and artists. If you know an author is Pagan, but they aren't marked as such, send me a message and I will correct it.




  • Time Garden, The by EdwardEager (Fantasy)
    Time and again, the children from Knight’s Castle have longed for another magic adventure. But you can’t find magic just anywhere. It doesn’t just grow like grass. It requires the right place and the right time. Or thyme, as the case may be. For at Mrs. Whiton’s house, magic grows wild as the fragrant banks of thyme in her garden. Eliza insists that time doesn’t grow, it flies - yet growing in the garden is olden time, future time, and common time. Or so says the Natterjack, the odd toad-like creature who presides over the garden and accompanies the kids on a series of perilous, hilarious, always unpredictable adventures.

  • Walking the World in Wonder: A Children's Herbal by Ellen Evert Hopman (Non-Fiction) *PAGAN*
    Walking the World in Wonder covers the medicinal and magical uses of sixty-seven common herbs. Each herb playfully introduces itself and talks about its habitat and many uses. With fun, easy-to-follow activities, herbalist Ellen Evert Hopman teaches children basic herbal skills and invites them to make a sunflower seed mosaic, sew a catnip-filled mouse, and dig for Jerusalem artichoke roots. Children gain a sense of self-sufficiency and awe for the earth's treasures; parents and teachers will appreciate how these earth-centered activities are placed within a broader social and environmental context. Sixty-seven full-color photographs enable children, parents, and teachers to identify these herbs during walks and field trips.

  • Water Wishes (Magic Elements Quartet) by Mallory Loehr (Fiction)
    Nine-year-old Polly and her younger brother, Sam, find a corked bottle at the beach. Inside is an ancient parchment promising three wishes. Before their adventure is over, older brother Joe will disappear and Polly and Sam will have to journey under the sea to get him back! This first book in the new Magic Elements quartet combines magic and adventure in an easy-to-read format perfect for the in-between reader.

  • We Gather Together: Celebrating the HarvestSeason by Wendy Pfeffer (Non-Fiction)
    The official start of the harvest season, it occurs around September 21 each year. It marks the end of summer and the beginning of longer nights and shorter days. For many cultures around the world, the fall equinox represents a time to celebrate the harvest and begin collecting and storing crops.

  • Well-Wishers, The by Edward Eager (Fantasy)
    The wishing well is all used up, its magic drained, its enchantment gone dry. Or has it? In a reckless moment, Gordy threatens the old well, telling it to get going with its magic or else! and that seems to do the trick. Suddenly Laura, Lydia, James, and Kip—who feared their autumn would unfold without magic—are plunged into just the sort of outlandish adventures they'd longed for. But is it really the well's magic that transforms troublemaker Dicky LeBaron from ne'er-do-well to hero? Or keeps Appledore's orchard—and love life—in bloom? Or sends James on a doubly daring rescue of a damsel in distress? What does it matter? Sometimes the best kind of magic is the kind that isn't so magical at all.

  • Who's in Rabbit's House? by Verna Aardema (Myths)
    A Masai tale, presented in the form of a play, in which the frog gets the job of getting a monster out of the rabbit's house after the leopard, elephant, and rhino bungle the job.

  • Wind Spell (Magic Elements Quartet) by Mallory Loehr (Fiction)
    Three feathers fall out of the sky into the hands of Joe, Polly, and Sam. It’s clear that magic is touching their lives again when they see words written in the clouds—promising them the ability to fly! What more could kids wish for? But the threesome will soon find out that the power of flight is not only fabulously fun, but also deadly dangerous.


  • Wise Child by MonicaFurlong (Fiction)
    In a remote Scottish village, nine-year-old Wise Child is taken in by Juniper, a healer and sorceress. Then Wise Child’s mother, Maeve, a black witch, reappears. In choosing between Maeve and Juniper, Wise Child discovers the extent of her supernatural powers—and her true loyalties.

  • Witch's Primer, A: Grade One by Lorin Manderly (Non-Fiction) *PAGAN*
    Finally! Here is a children's textbook for kids being raised as Witches and Pagans. Each chapter teaches the Wiccan basics for each subject and ends with a summary and a list of questions for children to test their knowledge on the material learned. ¿This is the first in a series of textbooks that will get progressively more advanced for each grade. The intent is to help students begin their Wiccan education and prepare them for seeking out further knowledge on the topics that interest them the most.

  • Witch's Primer, A: Grade Two by Lorin Manderly (Non-Fiction) *PAGAN*
    The second in the A Witch's Primer series. This is a text book for children being raised Pagan and for adults who are new to the Craft. Each of the 18 chapters includes questions about what has been learned.

  • Witch's Primer, A: Grade Three by Lorin Manderly (Non-Fiction) *PAGAN*
    The Witch's Primer books are a series of textbooks for children being raised as Pagan and for adults new to the Craft. Each of the 18 chapters ends with a question and answer page to test the reader's progress.

  • Witches in the Kitchen by Blair Drawson (Fiction)
    Readers will celebrate, along with Ivy, the important pagan holidays of Beltaine (Mayday), Midsummer's Day, and Samhain (Halloween), and gather all sorts of witchy tips, tradition, and lore, including potions (herbal remedies), familiars (not pets), crafts (Twig People), the proper care of brooms and cauldrons, and much, much more.

  • Z is for Zeus: A Greek Mythology Alphabet by Helen L. Wilbur (Activity)
    Whose face launched a thousand ships? Who dropped an apple to win a race? What creature has the head of a woman, the body of a lion, the wings of an eagle, and always wakes up on the wrong side of the bed? The Oracle knows and so will young readers after they encounter the strange creatures, exotic gods, and exciting stories in Z is for Zeus: A Greek Mythology Alphabet. Helen Wilbur, who wrote the lively M is for Meow: A Cat Alphabet, brings the same wit and wisdom to explaining Greek mythology.