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Fairy-Faith
in Celtic Countries
by Walter Y. Evans-Wentz
The Fairy
Faith in Celtic Countries is THE definitive scholarly study
of the faery realm. Dr. Evans-Wentz is best known as the author-translator
of "The Tibetan Book of the Dead", but his first love
was this book.
Anecdotal accounts of local residents who have had real encounters
with the "good neighbors."~Salome
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Earth Light : The Ancient Path to Transformation Rediscovering
the Wisdom of Celtic & Faery Lore
by R. J. Stewart (Preface), Miranda Gray (Illustrator) |
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Fairies
: Real Encounters With Little People
by Janet Bord
"My
book concentrates on reports of sightings of fairies, not the
fairy-tales which abound in folklore. The first-hand reports
often describe fairies looking very different from the tiny
winged creatures most people think of as fairies. In fact they
are often 3 feet tall! I've also written about Fairyland or
The Otherworld in my book, and possible links with UFOs and
aliens."~Bord
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The
Celtic Twilight : Myth, Fantasy and Folklore
by W. B. Yeats
William
Butler Yeats was a poet a mystic an initiate of the Golden Dawn-arguably
the most influential esoteric order in the Western magical tradition.
In he returns to his roots in Irish folklore to call up a dazzling
array of sorcerers, faeries, ghosts, and nature spirits. The
result is an enchanting tribute to the visionary heart of Irish
folk tradition-and the memory of the poet who would not let
it die.~amazon
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Fairy
and Folk Tales of Ireland
by W. B. Yeats (Editor)
Synopsis
A gathering of legendry, folktales, and song profiles such familiar
characters of Irish myth as mischeivous fairies, the industrious
leprechaun, the fearsome Pooka, and the eerie Banshee.
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The Elves of Lily Hill Farm : A Partnership With Nature
by Penny Kelly |
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The
Living World of Faery
by R. J. Stewart, Sarah Lever (Illustrator)
Revealing
the fwery tradition as an aspect of planetary consciousness
an enduring Land-based resource, R.J. Stewart describes Second
Sight, Distance Contact, and powerful encounters with faery
allies and co-walkers. He offers contemporary techniques for
enhancing awareness and subtle energies through faery consciousness.
Other themes include the relationship between faery tradition
and the modern alien/UFO mythos, and between faeries and angels.~amazon
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Irish
Cures, Mystic Charms, and Superstitions
by Marlene Ekman (Illustrator), Lady Wilde
Over 100
years ago. Lady Wilde, mother of famed author Oscar Wilde and
an excellent writer herself, collected these hundreds of ancient
cures. spells, homespun proverbs, visionary omens and prophecies.
Handsome, original illustrations give a further glimpse into
this little-known, ancient domain--a magical. mystical world
where early Irish doctors often prescribed tying up a few spiders
in a bag and wearing them around your neck to ward off fever,
where people believed it bad luck to leave on a trip on Wednesday,
Friday, or Saturday, whereyoung maidens washed their faces in
May Day dew to preserve their youthful complexions.
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Irish Wonders : The Ghosts, Giants, Pookas, Demons, Leprechawns,
Banshees, Fairies, Witches, Widows, and Other Marvels of the Emerald
Isle
by David Rice McAnally, H. R. Heaton (Illustrator) |
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The Findhorn
Garden
by Findhorn Community
This book
took the occult community by storm back in 1976. "See,we
told you that faeries were real, and here's the proof!"
~Salome
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To Hear
the Angels Sing : An Odyssey of Co-Creation With the Devic Kingdom
by Dorothy. MacLean
The success
and renown of the Findhorn gardens arose in part from Dorothy's
telepathic contact with the "Devic" kingdoms. Many of the messages
she received are included in this book, and their wisdom quickens
an awareness of our partnership with all the evolutionary streams
of life. ~amazon
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Encyclopedia
of Faeries
by Katharine Mary Briggs |
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