The Witch's Book of Shadows: The Craft, Lore & Magick of the Witch's Grimoire
By Jason Mankey
4/5
()
About this ebook
Discover the fascinating history, tradition, and modern uses of the Book of Shadows. This fun and easy-to-use guide provides essential information on creating and consecrating a Book of Shadows, as well as how to make it a part of your practice.
Learn about the various types of Books of Shadows, their roles throughout history, and how they differ from regular spellbooks. Enjoy advice and excerpts from the grimoires of well-known modern and historical Witches. Explore a wide variety of ideas for what to include in your own Book of Shadows. Like a magical chart showing where you've been and where you're going, this wonderful tool is your personal guide to Witchcraft.
Praise:
"This is the complete guide to the Book of Shadows...Mankey has given Wiccans a great gift."—John Beckett, blogger at "Under the Ancient Oaks" and author of The Path of Paganism
"This engaging, personal, and well-researched book explores a little-considered subject, the Book of Shadows, from every angle."—Yvonne Aburrow, author of All Acts of Love and Pleasure: Inclusive Wicca (Avalonia, 2014)
"If Books of Shadows are your bag, then look no further. Jason Mankey once again shows off his skill as a well-practiced Witch with this collection of stories, tips, and tricks about that most personal of magical tools: the Book of Shadows. A great addition to every Wiccan's shelf."—Jenna T. Beachy, author of The Secret Country of Yourself: Discover the Powerful Magick of Your Endless Inner World
"As always, Mankey brings insight and delight to the magickal process. The Witch's Book of Shadows is an in-depth, yet approachable guidebook to all the elements of crafting your own Books of Shadows. Dive in and enjoy!"—Lasara Firefox Allen, bestselling author of Jailbreaking the Goddess: A Radical Revisioning of Feminist Spirituality
Jason Mankey
Jason Mankey is a third-degree Gardnerian High Priest and helps run two Witchcraft covens in the San Francisco Bay Area with his wife, Ari. He is a popular speaker at Pagan and Witchcraft events across North America and Great Britain and has been recognized by his peers as an authority on the Horned God, Wiccan history, and occult influences in rock and roll. You can follow him on Instagram and Twitter @panmankey. Jason is the author of several books, including The Witch’s Book of Spellcraft, The Horned God of the Witches, and Transformative Witchcraft.
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Reviews for The Witch's Book of Shadows
16 ratings3 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Excellent info and guidance, very warm and fun writing style.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Great help for those who know a bit already, but need a little extra help getting their BoS started!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This is a useful guide to making your own Book of Shadows. It's primarily aimed at people who haven't made one before, with information on the history of magical books, suggestions on what to include and how to organize what you've included, information on different formats, how to decorate a BoS, and how to cleanse and consecrate one. That same breadth of coverage, though, means that a more experienced practitioner may find ideas and inspiration about what they can do with a BoS they've already created. Mankey writes a lot about his own experiences, which I found interesting, but then, I knew I liked his writing style from having just read The Witch's Athame: The Craft, Lore & Magick of Ritual Blades. While he's a Witch, and while this book was written for Witches/Wiccans, a lot of it could be adapted to other traditions. Many of the ideas presented didn't appeal to me (write in a special alphabet?) and the thought of destroying an old BoS made me feel a bit faint, although I could see why you might want to do that. But I found a few ideas in this book that I plan to try, and I'm glad I read the book.
Book preview
The Witch's Book of Shadows - Jason Mankey
photo by Tymn Urban
Jason Mankey has been a Pagan and a Witch for over twenty years and has spent much of that time writing, talking, and ritualizing across North America. He is a frequent visitor to a plethora of Pagan festivals, where he can often be found talking about Pagan deities, rock and roll, and various aspects of Pagan history. He is currently the editor of the Patheos Pagan channel and can be found online at his blog, Raise the Horns, www.patheos.com/blogs/panmankey.
Llewellyn Publications
Woodbury, Minnesota
Copyright Information
The Witch’s Book of Shadows: The Craft, Lore & Magick of the Witch’s Grimoire © 2017 by Jason Mankey.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any matter whatsoever, including Internet usage, without written permission from Llewellyn Publications, except in the form of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
As the purchaser of this e-book, you are granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on screen. The text may not be otherwise reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, or recorded on any other storage device in any form or by any means.
Any unauthorized usage of the text without express written permission of the publisher is a violation of the author’s copyright and is illegal and punishable by law.
First e-book edition © 2017
E-book ISBN: 9780738750149
Book series design by Rebecca Zins
Cover design by Lisa Novak
Cover Illustration by John Kachik
Interior illustrations by Mickie Mueller
Llewellyn Publications is an imprint of Llewellyn Worldwide Ltd.
Names: Mankey, Jason, author.
Title: The witch’s book of shadows : the craft, lore & magick of the
witch’s grimoire / by Jason Mankey.
Description: FIRST EDITION. | Woodbury : Llewellyn Worldwide,
Ltd, 2017. | Series: The witch’s tools ; # 6 | Includes bibliographical
references.
Identifiers: LCCN 2016047265 (print) | LCCN 2016051780 (ebook) |
ISBN 9780738750149 | ISBN 9780738751917 (ebook)
Subjects: LCSH: Witchcraft. | Magic.
Classification: LCC BF1566 .M27653 2017 (print) | LCC BF1566
(ebook) | DDC
133.4/3—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2016047265
Llewellyn Publications does not participate in, endorse, or have any authority or responsibility concerning private business arrangements between our authors and the public.
Any Internet references contained in this work are current at publication time, but the publisher cannot guarantee that a specific reference will continue or be maintained. Please refer to the publisher’s website for links to current author websites.
Llewellyn Publications
Llewellyn Worldwide Ltd.
2143 Wooddale Drive
Woodbury, MN 55125
www.llewellyn.com
Manufactured in the United States of America
For all the circles, groves, and covens over the years, including but not limited to the Oak Court, Green Spiral, the Lansing Pagan Village, Windshadow, the Walnut House of Cats, Cedarsong Grove, and Oak’s Shadow. Thanks for helping to make me a better Witch and a better person. Much love!
contents
introduction
1: Some Different Types of Books of Shadows
2: Putting Together a Book of Shadows and Making It Your Own
3: A Brief History of Magical Books, Words, and Symbols
4: What to Put in a Book of Shadows
5: The Book of Shadows—Out of the Shadows
6: Alphabets, Fonts, Inks, and Symbols
7: Goddesses and Gods of the Books
8: The Book of Shadows in Ritual
9: Cleansing, Consecrating, and Other Rituals
10: New Frontiers and the BoS
Bibliography and Further Reading
introduction
My first Witch tool was a Book of Shadows. It was a tiny little Nepalese journal that I picked up at a local head shop/hippie store. Instead of being black, it was a virtual rainbow of colors on a soft cloth cover. Its pages were handmade (at least according to the stamp inside of it), with none alike. Some of them felt like tissue paper, while others were far more sturdy.
It was a rather appropriate BoS (BoS—that’s how many Witches abbreviate Book of Shadows
) for me at the time. I was kind of a tree-hugging free spirit and loved the idea of a resurgent 1960s type of counterculture. With its emphasis on the earth and the seasons, Witchcraft felt like a natural extension of what I had already come to believe as a young adult. My book was pocket-sized too, and I envisioned myself scribbling in it at jam-band concerts, jotting down the sort of secrets that can only be revealed during an eight-minute guitar solo.
Though I still own that first Book of Shadows, I never did that much with it. Dreaming about its contents was far easier than creating content for it. There are a few ritual sketches inside of it, and I did transcribe a chant I learned at my first Pagan festival (a chant that is now so commonplace to me, I nearly giggled when I came across it before writing today). There’s also a Christo-Pagan ritual in it, written when my first footfalls on the Pagan path were more tentative than sure-footed. On the last page of that early BoS is a call to the Inuit goddess Pinga written for a long-ago Samhain ritual.
That first BoS is a curious little snapshot of my early life as a Pagan and a Witch. There is a lot of confusion in its pages, and it contains several ideas that ended up being spiritual dead ends in my life. I like to flip through it sometimes to remind myself of how far I’ve come, but it’s not all that representative of where I am today. On the plus side, it does take me back to a simpler time in my life, which is sort of fun.
My second attempt at a Book of Shadows yielded much more fruit. That book was originally a blue leather-bound journal with a sun on the cover that I purchased at a local Barnes and Noble. Its pages were lined and uniform, and I filled much of it up over the next few years with rituals, poems, and even some handcrafted mythology. It’s still my favorite BoS, and I’ve used it at handfastings (marriage ceremonies) and an assortment of rituals around the country. It contains some of my earliest coherent thoughts as a Witch and still occupies a place of honor in my ritual room.
Also important to me is my wife’s BoS (don’t worry, she doesn’t mind when I flip through its pages). Her first BoS was a rather generic brown journal—there were no suns or moons on the cover of her book. When I have a question I don’t know the answer to, I sometimes page through her writings in hopes of finding the information I need. Her BoS has not weathered the years particularly well and is literally falling apart at the seams.
If you were to ask my wife and me about the two most important tools we use in Witchcraft, we’d both say our athames and our books. We often refer to her first BoS and my second as our books.
They’ve been such an important part of our journey that we feel as if they deserve a little extra recognition in our lives, even if the way we refer to them is a bit mundane.
Over the last eight years, the number of BoS’s in our house has risen dramatically. After being initiated into the Gardnerian tradition of Witchcraft (named after its founder, Gerald Gardner), my wife and I were given the first third of the Gardnerian Book of Shadows. Because Gardnerian Witchcraft is an initiatory tradition with three different degrees,
or levels, a complete Gardnerian BoS is assembled over the course of several years as individual Witches learn new things and progress through the system.
Shortly after being initiated, my wife and I left our home of fifteen years for America’s West Coast. There we found ourselves starting a new coven not connected to any particular Witch tradition. As that particular coven grew, we built a Book of Shadows around it, composed mostly by me but also with a lot of input from other members of the coven.
Eventually I started building new BoS’s for myself, utilizing the ritual structure of our California coven (which we eventually dubbed the Oak Court,
after the name of the street we live on). The Oak Court also does a fair number of public rituals, and both my wife and I eventually put together additional books for such occasions. As our coven continues to grow and innovate, our BoS grows along with it, with more rituals, spells, and poems becoming a part of our written legacy.
My wife and I continued our studies in the Gardnerian Craft and were initiated into the third degree of that tradition a few years after starting the Oak Court. This resulted in us receiving not only the rest of the Gardnerian BoS but also several other Gardnerian Books of Shadows from covens around the world. As covens are generally autonomous (there is no King or Queen of the Witches), each group is free to add whatever they wish to their BoS’s. This results in very different-looking books, even among Witches of the same tradition.
As of this writing, I have over fifteen different BoS’s on my bookshelf, and that’s not counting the ones that are a part of traditionally published books! Each and every one of them is special and represents a different point on my ongoing journey as a Witch. Some of them I share freely with other people, while others are for my eyes only. Many of them are drastically different from their companions on my bookshelf, but all of them are Books of Shadows.
I’ve had a love affair with books for as long as I can remember. I find that few activities are as pleasurable and informative as reading, and this love for the printed word has extended to the Book of Shadows. I fancy myself a BoS collector these days and enjoy building new books at what’s starting to feel like an annual pace. I don’t expect everyone to share my love of the BoS, but if I can capture a bit of why they are so special to me, I’ll feel as if I’ve succeeded with this book.
If you are experienced at keeping a BoS, I think you’ll still find some useful information in these pages. To those of you relatively new to the Craft, I hope this book helps in the crafting of your own BoS (or BoS’s!). It’s my hope that this book will shine a little bit of light on your path.
What Is a Book of Shadows?
In many ways a Book of Shadows is whatever a Witch wants it to be. Some BoS’s represent a specific tradition, while others represent a very narrow segment of a particular Witch’s beliefs, practices, or interests. If a piece of writing has meaning to a Witch (or group of Witches), it can go into a Book of Shadows.
A BoS is not a bible or an absolute. It simply documents the spiritual life of a particular Witch or Witch tradition (and everything in between). It can be public or private and doesn’t even have to be a book in the traditional sense. A BoS that exists only on a hard drive or in the cloud
is still a BoS. If someone says, That’s my Book of Shadows,
then it is! It’s the most personal and varied of all Witch tools.
A BoS can be extremely organized or rather chaotic. Its contents can be decades old or fresh off the Internet. There is no right or wrong with a BoS; there is only what’s right for you. More than any other tool on my altar, my Book of Shadows represents me. It contains my rituals, my words, the poems of others that I treasure, and even my blood.
If I were going to bare my soul as a Witch to an outsider, I would pick up my most beloved Book of Shadows and hand it to them. I might use my athame more often in ritual than my BoS, but I’ve spent far more time with my book in and out of ritual than with any other tool.
While the term Book of Shadows sounds like some centuries-old magical secret, it’s of relatively recent vintage. It wasn’t used to designate a Witch book
until the early 1950s and most likely evolved outside of an established Witch tradition. It’s a lovely turn of phrase but not a particularly old one.
Even though the term Book of Shadows is less than a hundred years old, people have been writing, keeping, and producing magical texts for millennia. The history of the BoS travels from tablets to scrolls to books, and while the words we use to describe those things are different, the idea behind them is the same. An ancient Greek scroll from 2,300 years ago might not be a proper Book of Shadows, but it is most definitely related to what we do today with our BoS’s.
The first BoS shared by Gerald Gardner (there’s that name again—he’s a pretty important figure, being the first modern public Witch) contained the rites and rituals of his Witch cult, a tradition that’s known today as Gardnerian Wicca. The actual writings in that BoS were (and are) oathbound, meaning individual Witches who receive that BoS have promised to keep its contents secret.
For several decades the only way to gain access to the rituals and rites of modern Witchcraft was to be an initiate of a Witch tradition. During that period of time (from the early 1950s to the early 1970s), a Book of Shadows served as a how-to guide for many Witches and was handed down from initiator to initiate. There were no printed Witch rituals in general circulation and no how-to books yet in print.
Initiates were free to add things to those early BoS’s, and many did. BoS’s were not written in stone, and while many of the rituals and ideas passed along have stayed the same, Witchcraft has always been a dynamic and evolving faith. As a result, the original writings of Gerald Gardner have been expanded upon and added to over the last seventy years.
One of the biggest fundamental changes in Wiccan Witchcraft occurred in the 1970s, with the printing of the first Witch rituals. Now people had access to rituals without being an initiate, but this didn’t remove the mystery that lies at the heart of a good Book of Shadows; instead it added additional layers and made it even easier to embrace Witchcraft. Now solitaries and eclectic groups could keep and create their own BoS’s, and many initiated individuals began keeping a second (and even third) BoS to highlight the material that was now available to them in books.
Your BoS Is About You!
I can’t stress enough how personal the BoS is. The only things that should ever go into your book are the things that resonate with you. The BoS is the one tool that we completely shape and mold around us as Witches. An athame always has to at least vaguely resemble a knife, but your BoS doesn’t have to look at all like mine or anyone else’s (and doesn’t even have to be a book). It can be written in any language or not have any language at all (a book of pictures works just fine too!).
In this book I provide suggestions, along with a bit of practical advice. I’m sharing things that have worked for me and are a part of my BoS (and those of my friends), but they may not apply to everybody. Use what you want and discard the rest. Make your BoS about you and it will be just perfect!
[contents]
chapter
1
Some Different Types of
Books of Shadows
While there is no right or wrong when it comes to a BoS, there are a few book styles that are more common than others. But that doesn’t mean every BoS will fit neatly into one of the categories outlined here. In fact, most BoS’s are a combination of styles. Just as most Witches are multifaceted people, so are their BoS’s.
I’ve arranged the following styles according to when they were first documented in modern Witch history, but just because a particular format was the first to be used doesn’t mean it’s necessarily better. A lot of Witches today start out with their own Book of Shadows before encountering one from a coven or tradition. Just as the BoS has continued to develop over the last few decades, so do individual Witches grow and change at their own pace.
The Coven Book of Shadows
The BoS I use most often in circle is my coven Book of Shadows. It contains the rites and rituals of my coven, along with a little bit of information about our beliefs and practices. I put it together myself from several different sources, and when someone is initiated into our circle, they are given a copy of the BoS.
The first tome in Witch history referred to as a Book of Shadows functioned much like my coven’s own BoS. It