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Wicca: The Ultimate Beginners Guide For Witches: How To Become a Solitary Practitioner

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Sure, there are a lot of TV shows out there and movies that have to do with Wicca or have Wiccans in them, but is it all true? What does it really mean to actually cast spells?

I mean, science is a thing and it says that it’s not possible, right?

Well, the truth is, we all want to believe that there are primordial powers out there
and I’m here to tell you that there are

Follow me on a guide to the Wiccan faith and ideals where you’ll find out that we believe in tolerance and acceptance above everything else. Let me shake off the mystery and the seriousness that plagues the Wiccan people this day and age. I’m here to give you the straight answers you’re looking for.

30 pages, Kindle Edition

Published January 22, 2016

9 people are currently reading
56 people want to read

About the author

Michele Gilbert

109 books10 followers
Michele Gilbert was born and raised in Brooklyn, New York. Drawn to literature and writing at a young age, she enrolled at Brooklyn College after graduation and majored in English. Michele did not begin writing immediately, instead embarking in the finance industry and spent the next thirty years on Wall Street.
Serendipity struck when she least expected it. After ending a long-term relationship, Michele found herself lost and unsure what the future held. She began to read books on grief and loss, looking for answers. Those led her to delve deeper into the Law of Attraction and its power. What resulted was remarkable. Not only had she begun to heal, she had also rekindled her former love of writing and discovered her life’s purpose.
The years have taken her through many twists and turns, but she learned valuable lessons along the way. Today she writes books–mostly self-help and metaphysical in nature–and feels compelled to share her knowledge with those facing similar experiences. Her greatest hope is to inspire others and show them ways to overcome adversity and gracefully accept life's inevitable low points.
Going forward, she plans to incorporate more teachings of self-help, finance and meditation. Regular meditation is very beneficial to her progress as she forges a new life. Morning rituals and positive incantations are other practices Michele embraces; they are very restorative in daily life.
As an avid hiker, Michele and fellow club members often hike the picturesque Jersey Pine Barrens. She is a history buff, voracious reader, baseball fanatic and a foodie. She also proudly supports Trout Unlimited–a national non-profit organization dedicated to conserving, protecting and restoring North America’s Coldwater fisheries and their watersheds.
Michele currently resides forty minutes from Atlantic City and the Jersey Shore. She makes her home with a Blue Russian rescue cat named Jersey, though she isn’t exactly sure who rescued who.


Amazon Kindle Author Page USA
amazon.com/author/michelegilbert

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http://www.shelfari.com/MicheleGilbert

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Profile Image for Daniel.
477 reviews17 followers
April 24, 2016
I actually liked this book, at first I thought I wouldn't since it is on Wicca and Outer Court Wicca. At first I didn't believe I would like it because of some of the misinformation in the beginning, mainly about the sects. I really did enjoy the format of the book, its almost as if the author was talking directly to you. Maybe that format is common now a days but even a scant handful of years ago it was quite a bit different. The format didn't impart too much information but it did it in a very non-threatening way. The author is just a touch preachy on darker magic and magic used for personal gain, a term which I haven't heard of in a while. That's not a bad thing per se, I think new witches should steer away from that until they've got a good head on their shoulders and a year or two under their belt.

While the author and I don't share the same views, I am not a wiccan and I do the occasional malefic when the situation calls for it, I think this is a very good introduction to Wicca. I would even recommend it to anyone interested in Wicca and I could even see giving it to a student to read. I think the thing that would have made this book a four star rating would have been a list of websites and books as resources. Hell, depending on how in depth the resource list was I would even rate it at five stars. If the author were to ever revise this book I hope she would put in a resource list for the children.
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