Magic Monday
Nov. 3rd, 2024 10:01 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)

Also: I will not be putting through or answering any more questions about practicing magic around children. I've answered those in simple declarative sentences in the FAQ. If you read the FAQ and don't think your question has been answered, read it again. If that doesn't help, consider remedial reading classes; yes, it really is as simple and straightforward as the FAQ says. And further: I've decided that questions about getting goodies from spirits are also permanently off topic here. The point of occultism is to develop your own capacities, not to try to bully or wheedle other beings into doing things for you. I've discussed this in a post on my blog.
The image? I field a lot of questions about my books these days, so I've decided to do little capsule summaries of them here, one per week. As I mentioned last week, once I found a publisher willing to bring out my fiction, a lot of it found its way into print in a hurry, so we're going to be in tentacle territory for a while now. This was my fifty-first published book, the fifth volume in The Weird of Hali and the only book in that series that takes place in a town that actually exists. Yes, that would be Providence, Rhode Island, across the Seekonk River from where I live now. I had the chance to visit partway through the process of writing the story, which was helpful, and also has a lot to do with why I live in Rhode Island these days. I used a mashup of H.P. Lovecraft's Providence stories as the raw material, so we get to find out what Charles Dexter Ward was really up to.
One of the entertaining features of these novels is that I kept on having to come up with new, colorful ways to do in the villains. It's Lovecraftian fiction, right? They can't just die in some bland ordinary way, like being shot. This one borrowed one cause of death from Lovecraft himself and another from Arthur Machen, one of the writers Lovecraft admired most, whose writing I appreciate and whose thinking annoys the bejesus out of me. I thought they both worked tolerably well. If that sounds entertaining, why, you can get a copy here if you're in the US and here if you're elsewhere.
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With that said, have at it!
***This Magic Monday is now closed, and no further comments will be put through. See you next week -- and in the meantime, if you're a US citizen and haven't done so already, VOTE.***
(no subject)
Date: 2024-11-04 01:05 pm (UTC)When reading a Tarot spread for someone else, from what direction are the upright or reversed orientation of the cards supposed to be read from, the reader's perspective or from the client's perspective?
I encountered this question while teaching someone at a bookstore who just bought their first Tarot deck. I taught them using the 3 card Ogham readings that kimberlysteele does as an example.
My hasty answer was to consider both upright and reversed meanings from the LWB as being in play, and seek to consciously balance the two extremes of the interpretation if one extreme begins to crop up. In addition, to meditate on the imagery of each card in the manner of Eliphas Levi (superficially, critically, integrally), and read the whole spread like a picture book tapestry.
(no subject)
Date: 2024-11-04 04:25 pm (UTC)