Best books on mythology according to redditors

We found 163 Reddit comments discussing the best books on mythology. We ranked the 54 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about Mythology:

u/qodbtwss · 50 pointsr/Meditation
u/WanderingWayfarer · 22 pointsr/Fantasy

Some of my favorite books available on Kindle Unlimited:

They Mostly Come Out At Night and Where the Waters Turn Black by Benedict Patrick

Paternus by Dyrk Ashton

Danse Macabre by Laura M. Hughes

The Half Killed by Quenby Olson

A Star Reckoners Lot by Darrell Drake

Sufficiently Advanced Magic by Andrew Rowe

Jaeth's Eye by K. S. Villoso


Here are some that I haven't read, but have heard mostly positive things about:

The Palace Job by Patrick Weekes

Revenant Winds by Mitchell Hogan

Ghosts of Tomorrow by Michael R Fletcher

A Warrior's Path by Davis Ashura

Valley of Embers by Steven Kelliher

Faithless by Graham Austin-King. He also has another series, The Riven Wyrde Saga, beginning with Fae - The Wild Hunt

Ours is the Storm by D. Thourson Palmer

Path of Man by Matt Moss

Threat of Madness by D.K. Holmberg

To Whatever End by Claire Frank

House of Blades by Will Wight

Path of Flames by Phil Tucker

The Woven Ring by M. D. Presley

Awaken Online: Catharsis by Travis Bagwell

Wolf of the North by Duncan M. Hamilton

Free the Darkness by Kel Kade

The Cycle of Arawn Trilogy by Edward W. Robinson

Dawn of Wonder by Jonathan Renshaw

Benjamim Ashwood by AC Cobble

The Crimson Queen by Alec Hutson

The Queens Poinsoner by Jeff Wheeler

Stiger's Tigers by Marc Alan Edelheit 

Rise of the Ranger by Philip C. Quaintrell 

Nice Dragons Finish Last by Rachel Aaron

Devil's Night Dawning by Damien Black


Here are some older fantasy and sci-fi books that I enjoyed:

Tales of Nevèrÿon by Samuel R. Delany - African inspired S&S by an extremely talented writer.

Witch World as well as other good books by Andre Norton

Swords and Deviltry The first volume of Fafhrd and the Grey Mouser by Fritz Leiber - Many of the tropes of the rogue/thief came from this legendary duo created by Leiber. And it's worth noting that Leiber actually coined the term Sword & Sorcery. This collection contains 3 stories, two average origin stories for each character and the final story is the Hugo and Nebula winning novella "Ill Met in Lankhmar" detailing the first meeting of Fafhrd and The Grey Mouser.

Swords Against Darkness - A '70s S&S anthology. It has few stinkers, a few mediocre stories, and a some really good ones. Poul Anderson and Ramsey Campbell both have awesome stories in this anthology that are well worth checking out. For some reason, there were quite a few typos in this book, it was slightly distracting, but may have been fixed since I read it.

The Best of C. L. Moore by C. L. Moore. I read this earlier this year and I absolutely loved it. The collection is all sci-fi and one Jirel of Joiry story, which is her famous female Sword & Sorcery character. I was suprised by how well her sci-fi stories held up, often times pulp sci-fi doesn't age well, but this collection was great. Moore was married to the writer Henry Kuttner, and up until his death they wrote a bunch of great stories together. Both of their collections are basically collaborations, although I'm sure a few stories were done solo. His collection The Best of Henry Kuttner features the short story that the movie The Last Mimzy was based on. And, if you are into the original Twilight Zone TV series there is a story that was adapted into a memorable season 1 episode entitled "What You Need". Kuttner and Moore are two of my favorite pulp authors and I'm not even that into science fiction, but I really enjoy their work.

u/darrelldrake · 21 pointsr/Fantasy

It seems like a busy thread to me! Suppose it has been busier, though. Linking one from each:

/u/ksvilloso Jaeth's Eye

The minor characters in an epic story are often forgotten, relegated to the dusty corners of a text; footnotes in a biased account that draws focus on the privileged, the named, and the powerful. This is a story from those shadows.

The lives of a mercenary, a seamstress, and a merchant converge. Kefier, who is picking up the pieces of his life after his brother’s accident, finds himself chased down by former associates for his friend’s death. Already once branded a murderer, he crosses paths with his friend’s sister, Sume, whose only desire is to see her family through troubled times. In the meantime, young, arrogant Ylir takes a special interest in Kefier while he himself is entangled in a battle with a powerful mage, one whose name has been long forgotten in legend. At the crux of their conflict is a terrible creature with one eye, cast from the womb of a witch, with powers so immense whoever possesses it holds the key to bring the continent to its knees.

Jaeth’s Eye introduces an epic fantasy tale of revenge and lost kingdoms, but also of grief, love, hope, and a promise for tomorrow. The Agartes Epilogues gets to the heart of epic fantasy from the sidelines.

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/u/benedictpatrick They Mostly Come Out At Night

The villagers of the forest seal themselves in their cellars at night, whispering folktales to each other about the monsters that prey on them in the dark. Only the Magpie King, their shadowy, unseen protector, can keep them safe.

However, when an outcast called Lonan begins to dream of the Magpie King’s defeat at the hands of inhuman invaders, this young man must do what he can to protect his village. He is the only person who can keep his loved ones from being stolen away after dark, and to do so he will have to convince them to trust him again.

They Mostly Come Out At Night is the first novel from Benedict Patrick’s Yarnsworld series. Straddling the line between fantasy and folklore, this book is perfect for fans of the darker Brothers Grimm stories.

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/u/undyrk Paternus

The gods of myth, monsters of legend, heroes and villains of lore.

They're real -- and they're coming back to finish a war that's been waged since the dawn of time.

Fi Patterson and Zeke Prisco's daily routine of caring for the elderly at a local hospital is shattered when a catatonic patient named Peter unwittingly thrusts them into a conflict between ageless beings beyond reckoning. A war of which he is the primary target, and perhaps the cause.

In order to survive, Fi and Zeke must forget everything they know about the world and come to grips with the astonishing reality of the Firstborn. Only then can they hope to learn the secrets locked in Peter's mind, help stave off an ancient evil that's been known by many names and feared by all, and discover truths about themselves perhaps best left hidden.

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/u/tanniel The Eagle's Flight

Peace in the Seven Realms of Adalmearc is only as strong as those who rule them. With the death of the high king and his heir too young to assume the throne, political intrigues fill the landscape as the leading noble families scheme and plot their way to power. Meanwhile, enemies abroad sense the changes and make their own preparations.

Standing as a safeguard against both foreign foes as well as enemies closer to heart are the Order and its knights. Keeping the realms of Adalmearc united and at peace is their foremost duty. But when the strife turns political and the enemy is difficult to discern, when alliances shift and allegiances are torn, even the hitherto unassailable honour of a knight may become stained.

The Eagle's Flight compiles the first three of the Chronicles of Adalmearc. It is a journey into the world of Adal, its realms, peoples, cultures, and conflicts.

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/u/stevenkelliher Valley of Embers

For hundreds of years, the flame-wielding Embers have been the last line of defense against the nightmare creatures from the World Apart, but the attacks are getting worse. Kole Reyna guards Last Lake from the terrors of the night, but he fears for his people’s future.

When Kole is wounded by a demon unlike any they have seen before, the Emberfolk believe it is a sign of an ancient enemy returned, a powerful Sage known as the Eastern Dark.

Kole has never trusted in prophecy, but with his people hanging on the precipice, he reluctantly agrees to lead the Valley’s greatest warriors in a last desperate bid for survival. Together, they will risk everything in search of a former ally long-thought dead, and whether Kole trusts him or not, he may be the only one capable of saving them.

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/u/stevethomas Klondaeg Omnibus

Monsters killed his parents, and Klondaeg is out for revenge. Armed with a double-headed battle-axe with a split personality, Klondaeg travels the world, teaming up with its mightiest adventurers to battle every monster he can find. Klondaeg is the greatest monster hunter in all of history, but the world needs more than a monster hunter. It needs a lord of heroes.

This omnibus edition collects all of Klondaeg’s outrageous adventures, including “Klondaeg The Monster Hunter,” “Klondaeg Saves Fromsday,” “Klondaeg and the Klondaeg Hunters,” and “Klondaeg: Lord of Heroes.”

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/u/salaris Sufficiently Advanced Magic

Five years ago, Corin Cadence’s brother entered the Serpent Spire — a colossal tower with ever-shifting rooms, traps, and monsters. Those who survive the spire’s trials return home with an attunement: a mark granting the bearer magical powers. According to legend, those few who reach the top of the tower will be granted a boon by the spire’s goddess.

He never returned.

Now, it’s Corin’s turn. He’s headed to the top floor, on a mission to meet the goddess.

If he can survive the trials, Corin will earn an attunement, but that won’t be sufficient to survive the dangers on the upper levels. For that, he’s going to need training, allies, and a lot of ingenuity.

The journey won’t be easy, but Corin won’t stop until he gets his brother back.

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/u/ashearmstrong A Demon in the Desert

Grimluk is an orc with one purpose: hunting demons.

The Wastelands mining town of Greenreach Bluffs is deteriorating: with each passing day its inhabitants grow more fearful and paranoid, plagued by...something. They suffer nightmares and hallucinations, there are murders at the mine; the community is on the brink of madness and ruin and, as events escalate, realization dawns: the town has a demon problem. Two attempts at hunting it down fail, Greenreach Bluffs is at breaking point...and then Grimluk the Orc strides in out of the Wastes to answer their call for salvation.

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/u/pirateaba The Wandering Inn

An inn is a place to rest, a place to talk and share stories, or a place to find adventures, a starting ground for quests and legends.

In this world, at least. To Erin Solstice, an inn seems like a medieval relic from the past. But here she is, running from Goblins and trying to survive in a world full of monsters and magic. She’d be more excited about all of this if everything wasn’t trying to kill her.

But an inn is what she found, and so that’s what she becomes. An innkeeper who serves drinks to heroes and monsters–

Actually, mostly monsters. But it’s a living, right?

This is the story of the Wandering Inn.

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/u/michaelrfletcher Ghosts of Tomorrow

The children are the future.
And someone is turning them into highly trained killing machines.

Straight out of school, Griffin, a junior Investigations agent for the North American Trade Union, is put on the case: Find and close the illegal crèches. No one expects him to succeed, Griffin least of all. Installed in a combat chassis Abdul, a depressed seventeen year old killed during the Secession Wars in Old Montreal, is assigned as Griffin's Heavy Weapons support. Nadia, a state-sanctioned investigative reporter working the stolen children story, pushes Griffin ever deeper into the nightmare of the black market brain trade.

Deep in the La Carpio slums of Costa Rica, the scanned mind of an autistic girl runs the South American Mafia's business interests. But she wants more. She wants freedom. And she has come to see humanity as a threat. She has an answer: Archaeidae. At fourteen, he is the deadliest assassin alive. Two children against the world.

The world is going to need some help.

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/u/will_wight Unsouled

Sacred artists follow a thousand Paths to power, using their souls to control the forces of the natural world.

Lindon is Unsouled, forbidden to learn the sacred arts of his clan.

When faced with a looming fate he cannot ignore, he must rise beyond anything he's ever known...and forge his own Path.

u/coick · 12 pointsr/todayilearned

There is a really cool book called The Flight of Dragons that attempts to prove that dragons used to exist in reality. The author uses the traits described in folklore and fiction to show how they flew and why there are no existing fossils. His theory was that they flew by producing hydrogen from the reaction of hydrochloric acid on calcium. The dragon produces acid that pores onto fast growing but porous bone in flight cavities in its body. This is why they were so large but their body was actually very delicate (due to the lightness required for flight and the weakness of the bone). He uses this as the basis for all other known traits of the dragon - why they live in caves (to protect their delicate bodies), why they hoard precious items (a byproduct of the hydrogen producing process is the continual leeching out of corrosive chemicals from their bodies which would only leave inert elements), fire breathing (a necessity for controlling hydrogen levels and he uses the Bombardier Beetle as an example of how nature evolves seemingly impossible processes) and even their preference for aristocratic maidens (bred to be lady-like rather than peasant girls or men who were more likely to fight and damage their delicate bodies). It is definitely worth a read.

u/BryceOConnor · 6 pointsr/Fantasy

Ascend Online by Luke Chmilenko

Chronicles of the Black Gate by Phil Tucker

The Aching God by Mike Shel

The Castes and the OutCastes by Davis Ashura

Paternus by Dyrk Ashton

​

I could keep going all day, but here's some starters, ha!

u/DavisAshura · 6 pointsr/Fantasy

Dyrk Ashton's Paternusseries. It's urban fantasy that's more epic than most epic fantasies.

u/0100110101101010 · 4 pointsr/Showerthoughts

I read that a big part of the cow being sacred, and potentially the origin of the Hindu religion, was that magic mushrooms would grow on its dung allowing people to have these profound religious experiences. What are your thoughts on this?

>"According to the entheogen theory of religious origins, the significance of the cow for Hinduism is that it is the source of the entheogenic psilocybin mushrooms which trigger intense religious/mystical experiences when they are ingested."

From the book; http://www.amazon.com/Soma-Mushroom-Immortality-Ethno-Mycological-Studies/dp/0156838001

u/[deleted] · 4 pointsr/mylittlepony

A friend. Who works at a zoo. And is a furry. But either way, I can vouch for it being a good book. I wouldn't have mentioned it on the manesub if it was something that was inappropriate. It's really just a fantasy biology textbook, honest.

The book on amazon.com

u/TirraLira · 3 pointsr/occult

I have read one of the abridged editions, but I've never read the entire series. The entire series contains 12 volumes. The edition I claimed to be unabridged, but it was only ~400 pages so it obviously omitted a ton of content (including everything on Christianity and the Bible).

Regardless of the inadequacies of various editions, I consider the Golden Bough an essential book for anyone who is interested in folklore, comparative religion, mythology, magic, neopagan religion, or archetypes and Jungian psychology. Modern anthropology doesn't support all of Sir James Frazier's theories, but it still contains a lot of valuable insight. As for the "sluggishness," it's a scholarly work from a century ago, not a page turner. For what it is, I think it is well organized and well written - but perhaps some abridged editions are worse than others.

Have you read it? What did you think of it?

u/opulentSandwich · 3 pointsr/tarot

I'm assuming you're referring to the Lord and Lady of Wicca, in which case, any deck's Emperor and Empress will probably do just fine. You might like the Robin Wood Tarot, beautiful art that has Wiccan themes woven in: https://www.amazon.com/Robin-Wood-Tarot/dp/0875428940

u/evildrganymede · 3 pointsr/YogscastHannah

I wonder if this is the old Greek Mythology book that Hannah mentioned that she had when she was younger - it was originally released in 1977, it was a big orange hardback book that was part of a (popular?) series that covered Roman, Egyptian, Chinese, Central American and other mythologies. It also had really amazing artwork too!:
http://www.amazon.com/Monsters-Greek-Introduction-Stories-Goddesses/dp/B001A3PMB8

u/random_pattern · 3 pointsr/howtonotgiveafuck

Osho, aka Rajneesh, author of one of the best books ever written on tantra: Only One Sky.

That book will blow your mind more than Journey To Ixtlan. And it's more practical, too, since it has more exercises.

u/amazon-converter-bot · 2 pointsr/FreeEBOOKS

Here are all the local Amazon links I could find.


amazon.co.uk

amazon.ca

amazon.com.au

amazon.in

amazon.com.mx

Beep bloop. I'm a bot to convert Amazon ebook links to local Amazon sites.
I currently look here: amazon.com, amazon.co.uk, amazon.ca, amazon.com.au, amazon.in, amazon.com.mx, if you would like your local version of Amazon adding please contact my creator.

u/-R-o-y- · 2 pointsr/asatru

Dumézil wrote a little book about Loki.. I don't know on top off my head if it's available in English.

Also you might want to have a look at "trickster" comparisons such as those of Eliade of Campbell.

u/zebragrrl · 2 pointsr/Wicca

Can't recommend the Robin Wood Tarot highly enough.

Amazon has been a really good place to buy tarot decks.. I found a neat site that gives nice reviews of tarot decks with lots of pics, Aeclectic Tarot and then when I find one I really like, I go look at Amazon.

u/dariusj18 · 2 pointsr/AskReddit

I recommend reading Dan Simmon's Ilium and Olympos

u/trikem · 2 pointsr/booksuggestions

Here is an example of kind "non-conventional" fantasy romance. Because the heroine actually tries to be a professional (that's why she was kidnapped in the first place) than get a lover or something.

Captive of the Shadows

u/captnfres · 2 pointsr/shrooms

Yeah, check this out: https://www.amazon.com/Santa-Sold-Shrooms-Tero-Isokauppila/dp/0692177310

Or check out Tero from Four Sigmatic (functional shrooms), podcast about it.
I'm in no doubt.

u/wolfanotaku · 2 pointsr/Wicca

I really enjoy Robin Wood -- aside from Smith-Waite it's my favorite.

u/white_wales · 2 pointsr/booksuggestions

Ok so kind of strange to recommend a book I haven’t read but I see this one get brought up in discussions about American Gods every now and then. Looks like something he might like?

https://www.amazon.com/Paternus-Rise-Gods-Trilogy-Book-ebook/dp/B01CXPD8T4

u/AlecHutson · 2 pointsr/Fantasy

I'm so thrilled you enjoyed The Raveling! Makes me happy. The third book was just released, if you hadn't seen that yet.


Have you read The Aching God? I think it's a really terrific book. I've heard good things about the Rhenwar Saga. I also loved Paternus, though that might be classed as urban fantasy.


https://www.amazon.com/Aching-God-Iconoclasts-Book-1-ebook/dp/B07C9DBKB6


https://www.amazon.com/Complete-Rhenwars-Saga-Fantasy-Pentalogy-ebook/dp/B07KLXCH5X/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=rhenwars&qid=1575089953&s=digital-text&sr=1-1


https://www.amazon.com/Paternus-Rise-Gods-Trilogy-Book-ebook/dp/B01CXPD8T4/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=paternus&qid=1575089982&s=digital-text&sr=1-1

u/jauerbach · 1 pointr/Fantasy

Hi everyone,

My new book Guild of Tokens came out last month.

"What is Guild of Tokens?" you might be asking yourself.

Well, it's an urban/contemporary fantasy with a dash of LitRPG/Gamelit and some quests and historical fantasy thrown in for good measure. Think Neverwhere meets World of Warcraft.

You can see my spiffy animated cover here: https://imgur.com/1mzvnMx

I hope you'll check it out!

2019 Book Bingo Squares:

u/loonybinjones · 1 pointr/tipofmytongue
u/nziring · 1 pointr/printSF

Well, Asimov's "Foundation" trilogy mostly takes place about 25000 years in the future. But it is a fairly straightforward extrapolation of a galactic empire (still awesome work, though!) and people are still just like people today.

A lot of the other suggestions here are really good: Silverberg, Campbell, Clarke, Egan, Niven, Bear, Wright, Simmons, and Banks.

Gregory Benford's "Galactic Center" series takes place way in the future, first book is In the Ocean of Night.

A couple of commenters mentioned Simmons' Hyperion series, but nobody mentioned his novels Illium and Olympos.

There are quite a few novels where people travel through time to the far future, some by relativistic means, but those don't seem to meet your criteria.

u/UnDyrk · 1 pointr/Fantasy

Hi all! Released May 1, ratings & reviews are rolling in for Paternus. 5 stars on Amazon, 4.74 on Goodreads. Humbled, honored, and a bit shocked, to be honest.

"Mythology and history with a modern twist ... Witty, feisty and passionate. This was a fantastic debut done right. Action is nonstop with unexpected inventive adventures. Can't wait to read his next book. I am hooked!"

"Paternus takes you on a grand mythological journey spanning time and the entire globe ... The broad cast of characters is a world-building marvel..."

"Fun, frightening, thrilling, and thought provoking..."

"For fans of Lord of the Rings mixed with Beautiful Creatures and crossbred with American Gods... Yeah, all that ... The history and mythology were amazing, but so were the modern characters, stuck in a wild world of violent gods and monsters. Also, let us not forget to mention Ashton's stellar sense of humor, use of dialogue, and handle on suspense. I was freaking out from page one..."

Contemporary Mythic Fantasy / Mythic Fiction / Action-Adventure

Thanks!
D

u/punxx0r · 1 pointr/Showerthoughts

If you haven't, you really should pick up this book and read it. He gives a very compelling argument for the existence of dragons.

u/HiuGregg · 1 pointr/Fantasy

Paternus by Dyrk Ashton (/u/UnDyrk)

>The gods and monsters of myth have returned. In a breathtaking story that takes place in a single day, Fi and Zeke are caught up in the final battle of a war that's been waged since the dawn of time.

>Gods, monsters, angels, devils. Call them what you like. They exist. The epic battles between titans, giants, and gods, heaven and hell, the forces of light and darkness. They happened. And the war isn't over.

>17 year old Fi Patterson lives with her stuffy English uncle and has an internship at a local hospital for the aged. She doesn't know what she wants to do with her life, misses her dead mother, wonders about the father she never knew. One bright spot is caring for Peter, a dementia-ridden old man whose faraway smile can make her whole day. And there's her conflicted attraction to Zeke -- awkward, brilliant, talented -- who plays guitar for the old folks. Then a group of very strange and frightening men show up for a "visit"...

>Fi and Zeke's worlds are shattered as their typical everyday concerns are suddenly replaced by the immediate need to stay alive -- and they try to come to grips with the unimaginable reality of the Firstborn.

>"Keep an open mind. And forget everything you know..."

Dyrk has also offered to gift the book to up to 10 randomly-drawn folks for whichever month his book has been chosen. If you ever see the man, buy him a beer. Unless he doesn't drink... in which case, I dunno... Chuck a lettuce at him.

u/Jessiesmind · 1 pointr/whatsthatbook

Mythical Monsters? There are also links to similar books if that one isn't quite the one.

*Edited for formatting

u/OddAdviceGiver · 1 pointr/FASCAmazon

Hehe that's funny. We have "counting" cages where there's a shelf. One time I counted an A bin doing SBC, got the "are you sure?" beep or to me "fuck a duck" beep, and I KNOW I was right with my count. But here it is, it's dead in the VNA, lights are off in most of the aisles including the one I'm in because I'm counting every. single. bin.

I'm in the exact center of the aisle, last on any pick path. I pull everything out, making absolutely certain there's nothing in there and lo and behold there's a small book at the bottom.

Stow will be stow. Just because it'll fit there, doesn't mean that there it should go.

So I triple count, count again as I put everything back, and before I enter in the final count I turned off the lights, sat on the counting shelf, and read that book. It was funny.

I think that's the worst I ever did.

u/Cornloaf · 1 pointr/tipofmytongue

I think I know the book. It has been reprinted several times and some of the monsters were replaced with others. I have two variations of it myself and read it to my 4 year old.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/0439854792/ref=cm_sw_r_wa_apa_i_9PNHCb9VKVFGX

This is one of the versions.

u/basementmagus · 1 pointr/occult

Before I post my resources, I'd like to dive into what the Devil is to the early modern country dwelling folk who practiced cinningcraft/witchcraft and the animistic undertones that still pervaded their worldview until the late 19th Century or so.

The Devil often was less of the theological figure, and more of a folk figure that could refer to any number of local spirits or beliefs, often taking the place of pagan gods and fairy lords. Isobel Gowdie, regarded as genuine witchcraft, was a sixteenth century witch that professed some genuine Devil worship, although in her case the Devil was a king of fairys, in addition to the female fairy queen figure.

This further influenced the modern contemporary forms of witchcraft (Whereas Gerard Gardner made it a point to distance his horned god from the Devil, while other forms like the Clan of Tubal Cain did not), and modern regional practices.

The Visions of Isobel Gowdie

Devils Dozen; Thirteen Craft Rites of the Old One

Masks of Misrule

The Devils Plantation

The History of the Devil

The Fairy Tradition in Britain

The Man in Black

The Devil did me no Harm

The Devil and His Dame in Traditional Witchcraft

The Devil in Witchcraft

Now, I practice Traditional (In this case, witchcraft inspired by folklore, ballads, fairy faith and Folklore, in a truly operative and sorcerous manner, truly pagan and highly blasphemous) witchcraft, and exist as a Fairy Faith animist. The Devil reigns as a pagan god in my craft, the very spirit of air and motion, of the world, whose essence is infused with us in the form of a breath soul, our intellect and ego, whose body is the wind itself. He can be Lucifer, Cernunnos, Odin, Azael, Pwcca, Bucca, Janicot, among other names. He is the primary focus of my "one-man cultus" when it comes to the cosmology. Because of this, I find it important to know how he has appeared in the history of witchcraft.

u/FirstSalvo · 1 pointr/litrpg

Hello, Battle Avatars book 2 will release on November 25, pre-order is on Amazon now.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B081LLPRF5

Thank you.

u/Jenwith1N · 1 pointr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

If this works here is the kindle link for the first book. It's only .99 :)