A history of the origins, development, prosecutions, and persecutions of witchcraft and those accused of practicing it from the earliest years of the Middle Ages through the 15th century. While it is, at times, merely dry, repeated recitations of the accusations against witches, Russell builds a compelling case that it was heresy and not folklore nor the Inquisition itself that drove the ever increasing popularity of witchcraft in general and prosecuting people as witches in particular. Despite the confluence of the title and being in my 50s when I read this, at no point did this turn into a self-help book.