Via The Sacred Space, a few months ago, to be honest. I’ve only just found the draft and finished writing the post. I am work-avoiding, you see.
How many Pagan oriented books do I have?
Lots. At last count I had around four hundred; there’s bound to be more. I’ve been weeding books out lately, to pass on to a local Wiccan lending library.
What’s the last Pagan book I read?
Eliade’s The Sacred and the Profane. A lot of my pagan books focus on religious subjects and cross-path study. If you were expecting something a little more ‘traditionally’ Neopagan, the last book of that kind was John Michael Greer’s The Druidry Handbook. (It occurs to me that I should get back to posting my pagan book reviews on-line, once they’ve been published in print.)
What’s the last Pagan book I bought?
The Eliade, I think. I’m pretty sure, anyhow. The Greer had been on my shelf for a few months.
List three Pagan titles with special or personal significance.
Oy. Well, there’s Hutton’s The Triumph of the Moon, which demonstrated to me that there were people who could examine modern Wiccan and associated paths with a serious academic approach, instead of the superficial revisionist histories or fawning sycophantic blinkered versions you usually find. Grey Cat’s Deepening Witchcraft was thought-provoking and personally revelatory for me when it came out. And John and Caitlin Matthews’ The Western Way duology did a lot of good things for my perception of land and ancestry when I read it a few years ago.
If you were to write a Pagan book, what would the title be?
Heh. I’m not bothering to answer this one; the publisher changes all my titles anyway…
-Heh. I’m not bothering to answer this one; the publisher changes all my titles anyway…
LOL.
HRH