Authentic Magic?

In my BittenByBooks interview last November, I was asked if the magic in the COME HELL OR HIGH WATER trilogy is authentic. I was also asked where the spells came from.

Yes, all the magic is REAL and authentic! I found it in a variety of sources that I have plundered for information over the years: books about medieval magic, academic articles and essays about various ethnic folk rituals, collections of legends, transcripts of witchcraft accusations and trials, etc. For instance, the Italian folk magic in the chapter about Bartolomeo all came from an article I found in the Columbia University library stacks about Italian occult practices. The curse that starts the whole trilogy rolling, that Fen’ka screams out from the pyre, is almost all taken from 9th century Gaul monastic service books that the monks would use to curse nobility who tried to steal monastic lands or encroach on monastic privileges!

“I’ll get you, my pretty… and your little dog too!”

'THE WIZARD OF OZ' FILM STILLS - 1939

Another question in my BittenByBooks interview was, “How did you become interested in this?”

My reply:

I first became interested in the occult and magic when I was very VERY young and saw “The Wizard of Oz” on television for the first and second times. The first time, my mom says I was terrified of the Wicked Witch’s appearance in Munchkin Land amidst smoke and flames and that I ran straight to bed! (I must have been 5 years old or so.) The next year I began watching the movie again and made myself stick with it past the appearance of the Witch and after that — I was hooked! The Wicked Witch of the West became my favorite character because not only is she the most interesting but she is the only one who wields any real power in the story. She became my idol for years and years! (Even just a few days ago, I made a comment on FB about the hurrican wind picking up our house and depositing it atop someone wearing pepermint stripped stockings and glittering red shoes and my cousin responded: “You’ve been chasing those shoes for YEARS!” LoL!)

Rosemary

rosemary

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Rosemary is such a common but useful kitchen herb that it is easy to forget that it is also an herb frequently used in magical practice as well. (I just made a roast chicken with lotsa rosemary and it came out delicious! When I used the bones to make chicken stock, I added more handfuls of rosemary — together with carrots and potatoes — and got a wonderful pot of soup out of the deal as well.)

One grimoire (magical handbook) directs rosemary to be used with mint and marjoram, “tied with a thread spun by a virgin,” as a means to sprinkle water on newly-consecrated magical tools. This same handbook suggests washing your hands wth rosemary oil and onion juice as a protection against fire.

Rosemary has long been associated with the Sun and the element of fire; hence, its use as a protection against fire. It is also often burnt as an incense and, although I very much prefer to use frankincense, some manuals suggest using rosemary as a more affordable and easily available substitute for frankincense.

Rosemary can be used for healing and love spells or in spells of protection (ESP against robbers and nightmares). In each of these cases, the rosemary may be burnt on charcoal or placed under the pillow or bed to achieve its desired effect. Washing with rosemary-infused water can promote youthfulness… a much better way to acomplish this than the blood-bathing often recommended or practiced (as by Countess Elizabeth Bathory)!