Cunning Folk's Most Anticipated 2021: the First Half

It is a strange time for all who write or work in publishing. Will a new book appear in book shops? Will there be a book launch? Will it be distributed via trade fairs? In uncertain times, one thing is certain: we need stories more than ever, as a means of passing the time, travelling beyond ourselves when stuck indoors, and more darkly, as a substitution for living. Here are some of the 2021 titles we’re more excited about.

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Botanical Curses and Poisons: The Shadow-Lives of Plants by Fez Inkwright - chosen by Elizabeth Kim

Imprint Liminal 11

Release Date 5 January 2021

The author of Folk Magic and Healing returns with a darker book. Plants can heal and soothe; they can also intoxicate, maim, and kill. In the ancient world, plant poisons were the preferred means of execution. Their usage straddles mythology, history and popular culture. Within this beautiful treasury, we learn about the stories behind some of the deadlier plants, herbs and fungi we should avoid when foraging.

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The Shape of Darkness by Laura Purcell - chosen by Elizabeth Kim

Imprint Raven Books

Release Date 21 January 2021

Set in Victorian Bath, The Shape of Water follows Agnes, a silhouette artist, as she recovers from illness and struggles to keep her business afloat. After learning a killer is targeting her clients, she approaches Pearl, a spirit medium; the hope is that Pearl might be able to communicate with the murder victims and learn who killed them. They unearth a secret. Expect mesmerism, séances, ghosts and Victorian Gothic.

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Nature's Hidden Oracles: From Flowers to Feathers & Shells to Stones - A Practical Guide to Natural Divination by Liz Dean - chosen by Elizabeth Kim

Imprint Octopus

Release Date 21 January 2021

When we think about divination, our mind tends towards the obvious: scrying into water or a crystal ball; tarot; reading tea leaves; palmistry. But humans have been reading the signs in nature for thousands of years. Liz Dean shows how oracles are everywhere, if we look for them. We needn’t buy fancy gear, though it’s fun; we can looks for signs in the world around us.

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The Gilded Ones by Namina Forna - chosen by Ellen Uttley

Imprint Delacorte Books

Release Date 4 February 2021

This highly anticipated debut novel of Namina Forna tells the story of Deka, a young woman awaiting the moment that her life will balance on a knife's edge. But when her blood runs gold, she must make the choice between the village that has labelled her a demon and a new life offered to her by a mysterious woman, a life of danger and adventure as one of the emperor's army of immortal alaki. Rave reviews are already pouring in for The Gilded Ones, with readers and reviewers enamored by everything from the book's beautiful cover to its powerful message of female empowerment.

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The Lost Pillars of Enoch: When Science and Religion Were One by Tobias Churton

Imprint Inner Traditions Bear and Company 

Release Date 4 February 2021 (paperback)

Once there was no fine line between art, religion and science; all had similar aims, to gain new knowledge about our strange world. This book traces the history of humankind’s quest for knowledge in the western world, looking at gnosticism, freemasonry and hermeticism. Tobias Churton is a leading scholar on Western Esotericism and a lecturer at Exeter University on Rosicrucianism and Freemasonry.

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Artaud and the Gnostic Drama by Jane Goodall - chosen by Elizabeth Kim

Imprint Scarlet Imprint

Release Date Spring 2021

This is a Scarlet Imprint reprint of an older text, beautifully bound in linen and revised. Antonin Artaud (1896–1948) was a French dramatist and theatre director, among other things. ‘He subscribed to the Gnostic idea that the sensible world was creation by a demiurge who was “imperfect, possibly evil and depraved.”’ In Artaud and the Gnostic Drama, Jane Goodall offers a reappraisal of this figure, and considers the parallels between his heretical dramaturgy and the heresies of ancient Gnosticism.

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The Ghost Variations: One Hundred Stories by Kevin Brockmeier - chosen by Ellen Uttley

Imprint Pantheon Books

Release Date 9 March 2021

From the acclaimed author of The Brief History of the Dead, comes this mighty collection of bite-sized ghost stories that is sure to get even the most skeptical reader sleeping with the light on. These genre-bending tales of spectres and shadows are divided by their theme, making the collection wonderfully digestible, and cover topics so wide ranging that there will surely be something for everyone. A must-read around any torch lit campfire.

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Women and Other Monsters: Building a New Mythology by Jess Zimmerman - chosen by Yasmina Floyer

Imprint Beacon Press

Release Date 9 March 2021

Inspired by myth and folklore that centres on female creatures portrayed as frightening and monstrous (often written by men), Zimmerman revisits these tales examining the the very traits that deemed unnatural for a woman, characteristics such as ambition and anger and reframes them to encourage readers to embrace a new type of female hero.

"Through fresh analysis of eleven female monsters, including Medusa, the Harpies, the Furies, and the Sphinx, Jess Zimmerman takes us on an illuminating feminist journey through mythology. She guides women (and others) to reexamine their relationships with traits like hunger, anger, ugliness, and ambition, teaching readers to embrace a new image of the female hero: one that looks a lot like a monster, with the agency and power to match.”

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The Penguin Book of Spiritual Verse: 100 Poets on the Divine by Kaveh Akbar - chosen by Ellen Uttley

Imprint Penguin

Release Date 1 April 2021

100 Poets on the Divine is a beautiful selection of poetry written over the full span of human experience. From the earliest attributable author, the High Priestess Enheduanna of twenty-third century BC, to the celebrated and lesser known poets of the modern day, this diverse and eclectic selection of divine inspired verse is bound to get any reader looking deeper into themselves and the universe around them.

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First Person Singular: Stories by Haruki Murakami - chosen by Elizabeth Kim

Imprint Harvill Secker

Release Date 6 April 2021

Haruki Murakami used to be my go-to for breaking reading lulls. His books such as Norwegian Wood, Kafka on the Shore, The Windup Bird Chronicle, and Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman enchanted me; they are those types of books that take you beyond yourself and into the cavernous recesses of the unconscious mind. Wells, cats, female mediums and synchronicities crop up frequently as motifs, somehow each time wondrous and unusual. All this changed when I read Killing Commendatore, which had more in common with the “Great American Novel”, and bored me silly. First Person Singular promises a return to form for Murakami, perhaps. Eight short stories are told by the classic Murakami narrator: a lonely man. I am hoping for strange, nostalgic tales with that spirit that haunts all of his best books.

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Adriadne by Jennifer Saint

Imprint Flatiron Books

Release Date 4 May 2021

In recent years we’ve been treated to a number of reworkings of myth, from Madeline Miller’s Circe to Maria Dahvana Headley’s The Mere Wife. Readers apparently can’t get enough of such books, and literary agents and publishers alike are quick to snap up classical retellings. Here we revisit the tale of Theseus and the Minotaur, from the perspective of Theseus’ lover and the Minotaur’s sister, princess Adriadne of Crete. In a tale of family betrayal and forbidden love, again we see the story retold from one of the forgotten women in Greek mythology.

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Bear by Marian Engel - chosen by Elizabeth Kim

Imprint Daunt Books

Release Date April 2021

This is ‘the best Canadian novel of all time’ according toThe National Post. Quite a statement, but this book counts among its fans Margaret Atwood—we’re convinced. Bear is a folkloric tale, that speaks of a woman’s emancipation in nature. Originally published in 1976, this Daunt Books reprint is sure to bring this strange and compelling book to a new generation of readers. A shy and lonely librarian finds her job and sex lacklustre. When called to an island, she meets the bear, who she provides with food and company. In return, the bear satisfies the woman’s unmet needs.

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Cunning Women by Elisabeth Lee - chosen by Elizabeth Kim

Imprint Windmill Books

Release Date 22 April 2021

How could we not feel drawn to a book with a title so close to ours? Cunning Women is a historical fiction novel, set in 1620s Lancashire. It follows Sarah and her family who, in the shadow of the Pendle witch trials, survive day-to-day by selling herbal remedies to those in need. They are not the typical royals or aristocrats typically seen in this genre, but peasants trying to make ends meet, up against prejudice and witchcraft accusations. At this novel’s heart there is also a tale of forbidden love. Elizabeth Lee is a Cunning Folk mentor, and her debut comes highly recommended.

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Ozark Folk Magic: Plants, Prayers and Healing: Plants, Prayers & Healing by Brandon Weston

Imprint Llewellyn Publications

Release Date 1 February 2021

We tend to think of the US as a capitalist monoculture, but there is still a plurality of cultures, notably in rural areas. Many folk traditions moved from Europe to the US and intermingled with local, and other imported, beliefs. There are still aspects of cunning craft there, which have evolved with time. There has been a lot written about Appalachian folk traditions. Brandon Weston writes about the folk magic typical in the Ozarks, that regions that straddles the states of Missouri, Arkansas and Oklahoma.

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The Spirit of Japan by Sean Michael Wilson, illustrated by Fumio Obata

Imprint Liminal 11

Release Date 10 June 2021

What does magic look like in Japan? This beautifully illustrated book introduces some of the rituals and spiritual practices in the country, many of which are woven into the everyday. We encounter demons, offerings, fortune charms, the magic inherent in nature and the transition between seasons.

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For the Wolf by Hannah Whitten

Imprint Orbit books

Release Date 14 June 2021

"The first daughter is for the Throne. The second daughter is for the Wolf.” Such elevator pitches tend to say more about marketing aims than they do about the book in question. That said, this one is intriguing, and promises a compulsive read. For the Wolf is a loose retelling of Little Red Riding Hood. Except here the wolf is a man, not a monster. And Red’s magic is a calling, not a curse.

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City Witches: Accessible Rituals, Practices, and Prompts for Magic-Making in Busy Places & Small Spaces by Lisa Marie Basile - chosen by Elizabeth Kim

Imprint becker&mayer!

Release Date 17 August 2021

Lisa Marie Basile is a witch, poet, and the author of Light Magic for Dark Times and The Magical Writing Grimoire. City Magic promises to inspire us to tap into our inner magic when resources are scarce. It invites us to disconnect from digital and sensory overload and tune into the things that matter. When many of us are living in tight space during this pandemic, this book offers a different way of looking at our predicament. There is magic to be found everywhere, even in the seemingly least sacred of places—expect City Astrology, Kitchen Witchery and city wanderings.

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No Gods, No Monsters by Cadwell Turnbull - chosen by Yasmina Floyer

Imprint Blackstone Publishing

Release date Sept 7th 2021

At the heart of this story is a mystery surrounding the death of Laina’s brother, a victim of police brutality at the hands of Boston cops, but appearances are deceiving. What looks at first like police brutality takes on a far stranger turn. Monsters are not a thing of myth and now they wish to make themselves known. Creatures that had previously been the stuff of myths and legends begin to emerge from the shadows provoking a series of events that on the surface appears unrelated. With ingredients including a unexplained disappearances, a werewolf pack and secret society, this is a crime novel I can get my teeth into! “At the centre is a mystery no one thinks to ask: What now? What has frightened the monsters out of the dark? The world will soon find out.”

December Book Club: Strangers

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Our next read is Strangers: Essays on the Human and Nonhuman by Rebecca Tamás. It is a slim, radical, and compulsively engaging book. Through essays with titles such as On Watermelon, On Panpsychism and On Greenness, Tamás proposes another way of seeing, another way of relating, one that acknowledges our place in a web of life far greater than ourselves.

Rebecca Tamás’s poetry and criticism has been published widely. She is the co-editor of Spells: Occult Poetry for the 21st Century, with Sarah Shin, published by Ignota Books and her first poetry collection, WITCH was published by Penned in the Margins in 2019; to praise from the Poetry Book Society, the Guardian, Telegraph, Irish Times, TLS, White Review and The Paris Review. Rebecca is a lecturer in Creative Writing at York St John University, where she co-curates The York Centre for Writing Poetry Series.

Join us to talk about these essays via Zoom on Thursday 3rd December from 7 pm - 8.30 pm. Tamás will join us for the last 30 minutes for a Q&A.

Limited tickets are available via EventBrite. Alternatively, sign up to tier 2 or above via our Patreon for access.

October Book Club: Waking the Witch

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Join us on October 5th to discuss Waking the Witch by Pam Grossman. This beautiful book explores the witch archetype through pop culture, art, politics, and memoir. It’s an accessible and inspiring read. For the latter half of the session, we’ll be joined by Pam for a Q&A. Pam is the co-founder of the Occult Humanities Conference at NYU and host of The Witch Wave Podcast, which we love. You can read our interview with Pam here.

The nitty-gritty: This discussion will take place on Zoom on 5th October, at 6-7.30 pm (GMT). It will be hosted by Elizabeth, Maria and Yas. To join us, sign up to our Patreon or sign up for this event only via Eventbrite.

This book club is kindly supported by our friends at Treadwell’s Books. They have a few copies of this book in stock.

Cunning Folk's Most Anticipated 2020: the Second Half

Lockdown restrictions are easing, but many of us are still avoiding bookshops. In these strange times, it can be harder to keep up with new releases. The second half of 2020 has some exciting things in store for us, book-wise. We have collated a list of the books we’re most excited about. Expect much in the way of non-fiction, memoir and short story collections. Where possible, we recommend you purchase your books from Treadwell’s, and other indies.

If you have a book you think we’d like to read in 2021, drop us an email at cunningfolkmagazine@gmail.com

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The Good Ancestor: How to Think Long Term in a Short-Term World by Roman Krznaric  - chosen by Elizabeth Kim

Imprint WH Allen

Release Date 16/07/2020

We have inherited a world shaped by our ancestors. One day our children’s children will inherit a world changed by our actions. In this book, leading public philosopher Roman Krznaric explores how we can re-awaken the lost art of ‘cathedral thinking’; this is a guide to becoming good ancestors and re-building our capacity to imagine a future beyond us. 

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Love in Colour: Mythical Tales from Around the World, Retold by Bolu Babalola - Chosen by Elizabeth Kim

Imprint Headline

Release Date 20/08/2020

Bobu Babalola retells stories about love, from the homoromatic Greek myths to magical Nigerian folktales. The publishers say, “the anthology is a step towards decolonising tropes of love and celebrates in the wildly beautiful and astonishingly diverse tales of romance and desire that already exist in so many cultures and communities.”


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Blue Ticket by Sophie Mackintosh - chosen by Yasmina Floyer

Imprint Hamish Hamilton

Release Date 27/08/2020

Blue Ticket is the follow up to Mackintosh’s Man Booker longlisted debut, The Water Cure. Themes of motherhood and fate are woven into an intriguing premise of a lottery that determines which sort of woman you are fated to be. Protagonist Calla must draw a ticket to learn if she will be a woman who will have children or one who will not. There is no going back once a ticket has been drawn, but what happens when Calla thinks she has drawn the wrong ticket? This novel explores what happens when fate a freewill collide. Bold and chilling, this book explores ideas surrounding patriarchal violence, identity and human longing.

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Never Look Back by Lilliam Rivera

Imprint Bloomsbury YA

Release Date 01/09/2020


A modern reworking of the Greek myth of Orpheus, this is a magical realist YA tale about cultural identity and overcoming trauma, with a romance at its heart. “Eury comes to the Bronx as a girl haunted. Haunted by losing everything in Hurricane Maria—and by an evil spirit, Ato.”

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Entangled Life: How Fungi Make Our Worlds, Change Our Minds and Shape Our Futures by Merline Sheldrake (paperback) - chosen by Elizabeth Kim

Imprint Bodley Head

Release Date 03/09/2020

A young biologist shows us the world from the perspective of fungi, taking us on a journey from yeast to psychadelic drugs. This will undoubtedly appeal to those who loved Robin Wall Kimmerer’s Gathering Moss. Writes Robert MacFarlane, “Dazzling, vibrant, vision-changing . . . a remarkable work by a remarkable writer, which succeeds in springing life into strangeness again.”


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Unknown Language: A Science Fiction by Hildegard Von Bingen and Huw Lemmey - chosen by Elizabeth Kim

Imprint Ignota Books

Release Date September 2020

This is a story inspired by the work of the 12th century Christian mystic, polymath and visionary, Hildegard of Bingen. She created her own language, Lingua Ignota, the purpose of which is still unknown; in her illustrated Scivias, she described strange visions, today attributed to migraine or temporal lobe epilepsy. Here Huw Lemmey takes over and history becomes interwoven with speculative fiction; these Scivias, we learn, got lost during the collapse of the information age, and in the future fragments of the lost text are found by Pinky in an amethyst sea cave on the planet Avaaz. ‘Unlocking the secrets of viriditas, Hildegard's mythic quantum energy threaded throughout her communiqués, provides the seeds for humanity's rebirth on Avaaz. Lingua Ignota, Hildegard's visionary 'unknown language', arrives just in time for a world in flux, one whose coordinates are being recast.’ 

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Musings, Mazes, Muses, Margins by Gordon Rohlehr - chosen by Elizabeth Kim

Imprint Peepal Tree Press

Release Date 10/09/2020

Gordon Rohlehr is Emeritus Professor at the University of the West Indies at St Augustine and a leading scholar on calypso music. This inner journey is comprised of recorded dreams, poems, diary, flash fiction, polemics, prophecies and philosophical reflections - though has much to say about the outer Caribbean reality. 

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Outsiders: A Short Story Anthology edited by Alice Slater - chosen by Elizabeth Kim

Publication Date 17/09/2020

Imprint Three of Cups Press

Many who read Cunning Folk identify as outsiders. The witch archetype and magic has always been embraced by the marginalised. This anthology promises to strike a chord. Editor Alice Slater has brought together some of the best known short story writers around today, including Kirsty Logan, Julia Armfield and Leone Ross. The publisher says, “these pages are haunted by more than ghosts: loss, lack of direction, insecurity and otherworldly hunger.” 

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Witch Hunt: A Traveler's Guide to the Power and Persecution of the Witch by Kristen J. Sollée

Imprint Weiser Books

Release Date 1/10/2020

An immersive time traveller’s guide to the witch trials in Europe and the United States. Kristen J. Sollée is the author of Witches, Sluts, Feminists and Cat Call. If that’s not enough reason to pick up this book, Witch Hunt got blurbed by none other than Professor Ronald Hutton: "There is now a very clear need for a travel guide which deals with places associated with historic and contemporary views of witchcraft; and therefore it is a real pleasure to find one so extensive, well-written, well-informed and good humoured.”

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Tarot by Jessica Hundley, Johannes Fiebig, and Marcella Kroll - chosen by Elizabeth Kim

Imprint Taschen

Release Date 15/09/2020

TASCHEN is known for making beautiful books. In Tarot, author Jessica Hundley traces the history of Tarot; this book explores the symbolic meaning behind over 600 cards and works of art. Also in this volume are excerpts of essays from such figures as Joseph Campbell, Carl Jung and Eliphas Levi. This is the first volume in TASCHEN's Library of Esoterica series - something we’re very excited to know more about.

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Foxfire, Wolfskin and Other Stories of Shapeshifting Women by Sharon Blackie

Imprint September Publishing

Release Date 26/09/2020

From the author of The Enchanted Life come these modern reworkings of old tales. In these pages we meet the Water Horse of the Isle of Lewis, and Baba Yaga of Slavic folklore. We meet women who’ve transformed into animals, wild women who may remind us of our own ability to metamorphose into something else.

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Botanical Curses and Potions: the Shadow Lives of Plants by Fez Inkwright - chosen by Elizabeth Kim

Imprint Liminal 11

Release Date 20/09/20

This book introduces the historical uses of deadly plants, witching herbs and fungi. Coming from the author of Folk Magic and Healing, Botanical Curses and Potions promises to be beautifully illustrated and a fascinating, accessible reference book for witches, gardeners, and the curious. Nearer the time, win a copy via our Patreon.

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The Devil and The Dark Water by Stuart Turton - chosen by Maria Blyth

Imprint Raven Books

Release date 1/10/2020

Set in the 17th century, this genre-bending novel tells the tale of the world’s greatest detective, Samuel Pipps, and his bodyguard Arent Hayes. Whilst sailing from the Dutch East Indies to Amsterdam, where Pipps will be on trial for a crime he may or may have not committed, their ship is beset by devilishly mysterious goings on. Could the work of a demon be at play?

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A Spell in the Wild: A Year (and Six Centuries) of Magic by Dr Alice Tarbuck - chosen by Yasmina Floyer

Imprint Two Roads

Release Date October 2020

This seasonal guide to witchcraft and magical also delves into historical elements and explores the role of being a witch in modern times. Author of the book and academic Dr Alice Tarbuck says, “Where ‘witch’ was once a dangerous- and often deadly - accusation, it is now a proud self definition.” This book will take readers “month by month...through everyday magic for extraordinary times.”

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The Harpy by Megan Hunter - Chosen by Jodie Matthews

Imprint: Picador

Release date: 03/09/2020

The Harpy is Hunter’s highly anticipated second novel, following her dystopian debut, The End We Start From. The Harpy is a feminist fairytale, told in rich, suspenseful prose. When protagonist Lucy finds that her husband, Jake, has had an affair, they come to a compromise. She needs a way to deal with the betrayal, and he doesn’t want to lose her or their children. Instead, it is decided – she has permission to hurt him, three times. At any time, with no warnings. As life goes on and Lucy enacts her punishments, her desires become more feral, and she is drawn back toward an obsession she held as a child. The Harpy is a suspenseful revenge story that twists itself into a surrealist tale of a woman finding her inner beast.

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The Art of the Occult by S. Elizabeth - chosen by Elizabeth Kim

Imprint White Lion Publishing

Publication Date 06/10/2020

Artists have long drawn inspiration from the occult. Author S. Elizabeth (aka Mlle Ghoul) introduces major occult themes, and some of the artists influenced by them. Here we’ll revisit the mythical images of the Pre-Raphaelites, the theosophical practices of Mondrian and Kandinsky, and Leonora Carrington’s surrealist interpretations of alchemy, kabbalah and more.

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Strangers: Essays on the Human and Nonhuman by Rebecca Tamás

Imprint Makina Books

Release Date 08/10/2020

Rebecca Tamás is probably best known for her poetry collection WITCH published by Penned in the Margins, and for co-editing Spells: Occult Poetry for the 21st Century. Strangers is an essay collection exploring ‘where the human and nonhuman meet’; via the folkloric, the historical, through the mind, body and land, it looks for new ways forward in a fractured world. 

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Hag: Forgotten Folktales Retold - chosen by Jodie Matthews

Imprint Virago

Release Date 08/10/2020

What started as an Audible original is coming to print. Featuring stories from writers such as Kirsty Logan, Irenosen Okojie, Liv Little, Daisy Johnson and Eimear McBride, this is a dark collection which has (promisingly) been compared to work by Angela Carter.

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Queering Your Craft by Cassandra Snow - chosen by Maria Blyth

Imprint Red Wheel/ Weiser Books

Release date 01/11/2020

Many of the conventions of witchcraft can be problematic when viewed through a queer lens. This introductory volume-cum-grimoire combines the personal, the collective, and the political, to demonstrate how we can engage with the craft in a way that is accessible to LGBTQ+ folks.  

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Ruinsong by Julia Ember - chosen by Maria Blyth

Imprint FSG

Release date 24/112020

This highly anticipated LGBTQ+ fantasy romance might be aimed at young readers, but promises to be a real treat for us all. Set in a world where magic is sung, Ruinsong tells the story of two women - a powerful mage and a noblewoman with ties to an underground rebellion - who find themselves working together to reunite their country whilst navigating their feelings for each other.






















Five Witchy Feminist Reads

Feminists have long-identified with the witch archetype, lauding her self-reliance, bodily autonomy and refusal to be tamed. Maria Blyth suggests some witchy feminist reads to get you started.

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The true story of witches, sex and women’s bodies, objectified and violated by misogyny, is fiercely explored in this slim but riotous history by the founding editrix of sex-positive website Slutist. By reclaiming the identities of witch, slut, and feminist, women today, argues Kristen, might acknowledge their long and agonising histories of oppression, whilst subverting and overcoming it in its contemporary forms. Tracing a line through film, music, pop culture, technology, sex work and identity, Kristen shows that the word “slut” is essentially our modern-day equivalent of “witch”. Sex positive and intersectional, this hustling powerhouse of a book shines its light on art and life to create a radically inclusive and exuberant war-cry.  



2. Becoming Dangerous: Witchy Femmes, Queer Conjurers, and Magical Rebels (ed. Katie West & Jasmine Elliot)

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Looking for a queer, dissident approach to witchcraft that defies boundaries, and champions the inclusive nature of witchcraft? Then this book of essays is a veritable trove of inspiration waiting to be unleashed,  Whether you’re a queer witch, fashion witch, gender witch, sex witch or otherwise, you’ll find multiple essays here that will chime your bells, keep you spellcasting, and help forward your ideas to hex the patriachy in its myriad and monstrous forms. The Editors champion, in a sublime manor, folks of diverse experiences, from disabled witches to sex workers and those living with borderline personality disorder. The result is a book that upholds the powerful capacity we all have to uncover our very own magick, whatever that may look or feel like.

3. Witches, Witchunting and Women by Silvia Federici

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I could’ve chosen Federici’s classic ‘Caliban and the Witch’, but ‘Witches, Witch-hunting and Women is essentially an updated, more accessible version which opens out onto contemporary life in a way that is simply essential. It presents a concise argument of Federici’s, which is that “the witch hunt stands at the crossroad of social processses that paved the way for the rise of the modern capitalist world”. Through Federici we trace the body, as a working machine, and the shift which has made capitalist society’s demands seem plausible, if not desireable. We trace the damned history of the witch, the hag, the outlaw, and follow her through the 1700s to present day Africa, and those currently held in witch camps. Yet Federici gives us tools to move forwards, telling us not only what is happening now, but how to get active. As witches, we owe it to our forebears to step up to the mark. 



4. Waking the Witch by Pam Grossman

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Like many readers, I am an avid fan of Pam Grossman, and The Witch Wave podcast. In my personal sphere this entails (even in lockdown) an hour long walk through the woods where I devote my attention in part to the trees and in part to Pam and her diverse panel of guests. When Pam annouced the publication of her book, I was, like all good fangirls, straight on board with a pre-order. In Waking the Witch, Pam weighs in with her vast personal experience of the craft, whilst allowing others to shine too. Expect ancient voices and witchy art to fuel notions of embodied witchcraft today. Whether you identify with Hermione or Hecate, there’s something here for you. Pam traces the history of our ideas of witches and witchcraft without losing sight of the validity of the pop cultural references which have become so potently dear to us all. She champions an eclectic, community-oriented witchcraft which is ephemeral, ever shifting and responsive, but absolutely down to the ground. 



5. We Were Witches by Ariel Gore

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This novel-cum-memoir features one of my favourite openings of all time: “When I was born my mother was so horrified to be handed a female baby that she took three months to name me. My birth certificate just says “Gore Girl”.” This is the story of a writer, a young single mother who reels against familial and societal expectations of her, resisting the abject objectification and commodification of her body, her life and her livelihood. Through these ever mounting acts of opposition and defiance, the protagonist Ariel uncovers her own version of power, channelling it via and into her art. Disobedient and confrontational in both form and content, there is a softness to this book too - Ariel’s willingness to be vulnerable, to lean into that, might be her greatest magickal power of all.

July Book Club: The Haunting of Hill House

Image by @niamh_stroud

Image by @niamh_stroud

“No live organism can continue for long to exist sanely under conditions of absolute reality; even larks and katydids are supposed, by some, to dream. Hill House, not sane, stood by itself against its hills, holding darkness within; it had stood so for eighty years and might stand for eighty more. Within, walls continued upright, bricks met neatly, floors were firm, and doors were sensibly shut; silence lay steadily against the wood and stone of Hill House, and whatever walked there, walked alone.”

— From the opening of The Haunting of Hill House (1953) by Shirley Jackson"

For our next Zoom book club, kindly supported by Treadwell’s books, we’ll be reading Shirley Jackson’s novel The Haunting of Hill House. Jackson’s work is often reduced to a single short story, “The Lottery.” But there is more to Jackson. She was expert at revealing everyday evil, both in her characters and herself; you could say she was in touch with her shadow. Her novel Hangsaman is based on The Hanged Man card, its protagonist Natalie Waite a homage to Arthur C. Waite, who conceived the classic Rider-Waite-Smith deck. Constantly re-visiting the scapegoat archetype, she was inspired by grimoires and James Frazer’s The Golden Bough. Shirley Jackson was marketed as a witch, a persona she sometimes wore with zeal, other times denied. Her biographer Ruth Franklin emphasises that “…on some level writing was a form of witchcraft to Jackson—a way to transform everyday life into something rich and strange, something more than it appears to be.”  

Recently there’s been a Netflix series loosely inspired by the book, though the 1963 The Haunting is more in keeping with Jackson’s subtle psychological terror. Apparently the film Shirley, starring Elisabeth Moss as Shirley Jackson, is coming out on streaming on June 5. We Have Always Lived in the Castle has also been adapted into a film. Now is a good time to step into Jackson’s haunted mind. The Haunting of Hill House has inspired many authors, including Sylvia Plath, Stephen King, Carmen Maria Machado and Neil Gaiman. Now it can inspire you. 

Join us on Monday 13 July at 6 pm (GMT) via Zoom from anywhere in the world. Access this book club and support our content by signing up to our Patreon. We have a few book giveaways lined up and other online workshops for patrons.

May Book Club: Triumph of the Moon

Last month we read Peter Grey’s Apocalyptic Witchcraft on Zoom. It was our first attempt at this, so thank you to those who came along. It was a lovely group; we had an informal discussion followed by a Q&A with the author. Many found the essay particularly relevant in the current pandemic.

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Our next Zoom book club is on May 11th, 6 pm-7.30 pm. We will be discussing Ronald Hutton’s Triumph of the Moon: A History of Modern Pagan Witchcraft. In this important study, Ronald Hutton puts into question many of the long held assumptions about the history of Wicca, while also acknowledging the creative potential of “Britain’s first homegrown religion”. For the last 30 minutes, we will be joined by Professor Ronald Hutton (who will be heard not seen—he’s calling in via a landline). We will be focusing the discussion on part of the book, from the chapter Finding a Language through to Finding a Witchcraft.

To join us, email cunningfolkmagazine@gmail.com After we’ve confirmed your place, we’d be grateful if you could send us a donation of £2 via PayPal—this helps support our content and future events like this. We will then send you a link to the Zoom meeting. If for whatever reason this isn’t possible let us know and you can still participate. There are limited spots so get in touch soon!

Online Book Club: Apocalyptic Witchcraft

So for many weeks we searched for a venue for our book club, to no avail, and then the pandemic started and we thought it wouldn’t happen. After successfully attending yoga classes and a Treadwell’s workshop on Zoom, we figured we’d give this a go too. Our friends at Treadwell’s are kindly supporting our book club series. We’ll be reading our way through a series of books, fiction and non-fiction, from occult literature through to tales of the weird and novels inspired by mythology and folklore.

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First up is the titular essay from Peter Grey’s Apocalyptic Witchcraft, which we published on our website. It’s short so you can read it by next week, and it’s bound to generate some discussion. If you enjoyed this essay and want to keep reading, a variety of editions are available directly from the publisher Scarlet Imprint. This week only, confirmed book clubbers will be able to get 10% off this title. We will send a code via email.

This will also be an opportunity to get to know each other a little better and get some much-needed social interaction. We look forward to seeing you there!

The date for your diaries: Monday 30th March, 6pm-7.30pm.

What we’re reading: the titular essay from Peter Grey’s Apocalyptic Witchcraft.

How to join us: drop us an email at cunningfolkmagazine@gmail.com to confirm your attendance. We ask for a £2 donation to help support our content, payable via PayPal. If you’re self-employed or unemployed and struggling at the moment, let us know and you can join us anyway! Once your attendance is confirmed, we’ll send you a zoom link. We ask that you download Zoom and join the meeting 10 minutes before we start.