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265 pages, Paperback
First published April 1, 2021
Here’s a new book by self-described “Appalachian conjure man and folk-magic practitioner” Jake Richards. Richards explains the distinction between “conjuring” and “folk magic” as follows: “Folk magic is any superstitious activity undertaken without an appeal or prayer to a higher spirit or divinity that is alleged to cause a supernatural result...Conjure, on the other hand, is the direct and intentional employment of spirits, whether they be the spirits of the graveyard, the ancestors, simple spirits of the land you live on, or some other presence, to work on your behalf.” (Doctoring the Devil, p.9).
I found several things of interest in this volume.
The author’s fourth Great-Great-Great-Great Grandmother was a melungeon.
The book contains an extensive discussion of dowsing or “water witching,” which Richards refers to as “the most widely known form of divination.” (Water witching is the ability to pinpoint the precise location of the best spot to dig or drill an intended water well.) (pp.59-64).
The author provides a two-page section on abortions and abortifacients. (pp.164-165).
Doctoring the Devil provides four separate “conjure cures for madness when (madness) has been induced due to witchcraft.”
I wrote a thorough review of the author’s previous book on this same topic; that was Richards’ Backwoods Witchcraft: Conjure & Folk Magic From Appalachia. That review required me to thoroughly consider how much weight to credit to the author’s point. Nothing about Doctoring the Devil; Notebooks of an Appalachian Conjure Man has changed my already-published perspective.
My rating: 7/10, finished 6/22/22. (3654).