Sunday, October 2, 2016

Books for Pagan Children: Elementary (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.



  • Aisha's Moonlit Walk: Stories And Celebrations For The Pagan Year by Anika Stafford (Fiction) *PAGAN*

    The book includes a brief introduction to each holiday and an outline of the key pagan concepts and lessons for each story. Readers will follow Aisha to winter solstice, the longest night of the year, when she learns to appreciate the importance of family and figures out how to end a fight with her best friend Heather. During the fall equinox, readers will rejoice with Aisha as she celebrates her many accomplishments over the past year.

  • Ancient Celtic Festivals and How We Celebrate Them Today, The by Clare Walker Leslie (Non-Fiction) *PAGAN*

    In a world of electric lights and store-bought foods, The Ancient Celtic Festivals can help children make the connections to nature that their ancestors did. Whimsically illustrated activity pages invite them to bake a harvest corn bread, stage a spring festival, or warm up the cold depths of winter with hot spiced cider. Teachers, librarians, parents, and children alike will welcome this book as a fun-filled resource.


  • Bard's Book of Pagan Songs, A: Stories and Music from the Celtic World by Hugin the Bard (Activity) *PAGAN*

    These are the lyrics to just one of the more than fifty songs, chants, and invocations you'll find in A Bard's Book of Pagan Songs by Hugin the Bard. The book begins by explaining the nature of a bard's life. It is more than just singing songs. It is sharing the ancient stories and helping to build the community. It is functioning, when need be, as a spiritual guide. And it is being able to entertain with song.


  • Charge of the Goddess by Darla Hallmark (Activity) *PAGAN*

    An elegant recounting of the Charge of the Goddess, fully illustrated in colorable pictures. Fascinating detail, beautiful knotwork borders. Drawn by a noted fantasy illustrator especially for both children and adults to color.


  • Children's Treasury of Mythology by Margaret Evans Price (Myths)

    This sterling collection of the best stories from classical mythology especially edited for young readers is a reprinted edition of A Child's Book of Myths (1924) and Enchantment Tales for Children (1926), both graced with the gentle color art of the gifted illustrator Margaret Evans Price. These versions of such ageless myths as Proserpina and Pluto, Atalanta, Hercules, Cupid and Apollo, Pygmalion, Niobe, Prometheus, and others are as clear and beautiful today as they were in the 1920s. The illustrations evoke all the mythical wonder of these tales.

  • Conjure Woman, The by William Miller (Fiction)

    When their little boy Toby becomes ill, his parents turn for help to Madame Zina, the mysterious conjure woman, who uses the traditional healing ways of their African homeland to make him well.

  • Crinkleroot's Nature Almanac by Jim Arnosky (Fantasy)

    Born in a tree and raised by bees, Crinkleroot is the perfect nature guide. Who else can hear a fox turn in the forest, or spot a mole hole on a mountain? In this fascinating book, you will learn how to identify different types of wildflowers in springtime, find a beaver dam in the summer, locate owls in fall, and spot rabbit tracks in winter. Hidden puzzles in the art and simple activities like building a birdhouse and creating an autumn leaf book promise hours of fun, even in your own backyard!





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