Customer Reviews: Read 11 more reviews...
Another Great Buckey Book October 29, 2008 This was a gift for my 18 yr old son , he liked it much better than the old big blue book. I would purchase this again.
Buckland Garderian Book May 8, 2008 This book repeats a lot of things presented in Buckland's "Complete Book of Witchcraft." If you have that book, you don't need this one. Buckland is Gardnerian and if you don't follow that path, this isn't the book for you, either. However, Buckland is a great man and has done so much for Wicca in the US that at least ONE of his books deserve a place on your reference shelf.
Excellent Resource August 15, 2006 Raymond Buckland continues to be one of our leaders, bringing us another gem. I enjoyed Wicca for life, it filled in a few gaps "Big Blue" left, primarily the additional spell works. As a resource it's par excel-lance' but I personally missed the study guides. Highly recommend this book!
Durk Simmons author of Strings of Connection: Book One of the Witches in America Series
good book July 13, 2006 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I've never read Big Blue. Although I'm told it's a must have in any pagan library, I've still to get my hands on a copy. :D I may not bother since I now have this one and from all accounts it's the better copy. Now, I admit, I don't care for all of his theories, and the history lessons also certainly aren't the best. But there is still a lot of good info. It's like with any author, you take the good with the bad; you use what you like and ignore the rest. All Pagan authors have views you don't always agree with, just as we all have favorite authors that can do no wrong. :D Sam Cunningham is still my first pick, especially for beginners. He just gives you the info, and lets you fly with it where you would; there's no specific Path. That said, Buckland still has a lot to give, and he's a close second. Now, someone mentioned "Buckland states that prayer is magic, completely ignoring important distictions between prayer and magic." Prayer is most definately magick! Magick is just the manipulation of the energies around us to help bring us what me may need. And it doesn't matter how you do it. You could just as well get the same results by performing a perfect ritual at the perfect time & place with the perfect clothes, etc. as by just stating to the powers that be what is needed and ask them for help if they are so inclined. And that is exactly what prayer is. Rituals, Prayers, Affirmations; they are all a form of magick. I'm actually more inclined to send out a prayer to whomever is listening than performing a ritual. It's just what I'm more comfortable with and what works best for me.
Three stars -- with some qualifications November 17, 2003 14 out of 14 found this review helpful
I've never read "Big Blue," so I'm not as familiar with the style and background as some of you may be, and perhaps some of my comments will be repeats in that vein. (Perhaps not -- this IS a different book.) Anyway, forewarned. =) That said, WICCA FOR LIFE seems to be a very comphrensive and informative volume. It's full of information that will help you out if you're just getting started, but does not "talk down" to you if you've been with the "Old Religion" for a while already. Much of the suggested wording for various rituals is elegant and meaningful, something I don't find in a great many books about Wicca. WICCA FOR LIFE is about just that: how to live the tenets of the Wiccan faith in all life situations, from birth to death to initiation of children, and most especially how to effectively create and celebrate a hereditary family coven, which is an interesting idea and a neat thing to focus on, although I don't know how many extended families are all Wiccan -- in my experience that's rare. Unfortunately, the book DOES talk down to non-Wiccans, and to Wiccans about non-Wiccans. It refers to them as cowans, a term I (and others) feel is slightly derogatory and unnecessary. It probably isn't intended that way, but it feels almost cruel. The tone can also get a little sanctimonious -- Wiccan families are more open than others, Wiccan children are better-adjusted than others, etc, etc, etc. Maybe that's true sometimes, but I know for sure that faith isn't the only factor in parenting or in growing up, so blanket statements like that aren't really justified. I was not raised Wiccan, and I think my parents (Christians) were and are wonderful role models. I plan to raise my own children Wiccan, but I will be happy to have their Christian grandparents share their own love and wisdom with my children. The history in the book is also rather faulty. It doesn't go into depth, but it frequently mentions how Wiccans in "the burning times" wrote down their rituals in books of shadows and how they passed on the information to chosen children, etc. First of all, Wicca is a new religion. There were certainly pagans who went "into the closet" when you could be ostracized or worse for not being Christian, and Wicca does use some beliefs and practices from ancient (notably Celtic) pagan religions, but Wicca itself has only been around since the early-mid nineteen hundreds. Second, the "witches" who were burned were not what we Wiccans refer to as witches or Wiccans today. Some of them may have been wise women and men who were looked upon with suspicion as being "pagan", but for the most part the Inquistion and like horrors were political mechanisms, concerned with a "witchcraft" that was basically a reversed Christianity, and their victims were usually Christian people whose neighbors were harboring a grudge. Third, the author refers to witchcraft and Wicca as the same thing. Not all Wiccans and witches think this way. In spite of all that, I liked the book, and I'd recommend it for its incredible amounts of accessible and helpful information. Just talk it with a big 'ol grain of purifying salt.
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