It's really a shame that a book full of so many absolutely stunning illustrations is filled with so much absolutely useless nonsense; when it comes to what's actually inside the book content wise, the gorgeous nature of the illustrations feel quite a bit like attempting to put lipstick on a pig. A way to dress up an otherwise empty coffee table book.
Each chapter walks you through a brief amount of information on the "moon name" ... A "deity" or Neopagan "festival" of the moth ... Crystals and Herbs, and a bird (or some kind of animal) of the Month ... A Tarot Card of the month ... And usually a few spells or activities ... And yet none of them are very good at all.
All of the moon names are from the same standard list pulled from bastardized "Indigenous American" belief (all of which, hilariously enough, while constantly attributed to indigenous Americans, actually comes from European folklore) ... The Gods, when they appear, are all from completely random cultures, pulled with your typical lack of legitimate rhyme or reason- and very little real understanding of their actual nature or the beliefs surrounding them (let alone the parent cultures to which they belong) ... And the correspondences are from the same substandard books on correspondences found practically everywhere else, with nothing particularly new or interesting said about anything (let alone any comprehension of the differences of how they should actually be used for each purpose in half the cases).
Some chapters also include various "customs and traditions", "superstitions", and "sayings" provided. And of course absolutely all of them are provided with none of the proper context needed to actually understand any of them on any proper level. Worse, they're presented with over half of the information just conveniently missing entirely; for instance, in the section on the month of January, she never mentions why the dish "Black Eyed Peas and Greens" is eaten on New Years, even on a mythologized level- nor that this is specifically an American southern tradition which is prominent mostly among the impoverished rural and African American populations of the region;
very convenient
to leave that information out, indeed, as per usual.
Additional information like "Moon Phases" or the little blurbs about the seasons, or the "Wiccan Rede" make zero sense in half the spaces they're slapped into, and seem hap-dashedly thrown in there just for the sake of bulking things up so that the author had a measly bit more content with which to pad out an otherwise paltry book. But regardless of chapter or topic, all of the information provided is typically in the form of one tiny little paragraph- and that's it. That's all the information you really get.
Everything in here is so unbelievably shallow, and lacks any real amount of depth, or interest, let alone nuance- just as Eclectic NeoPaganism itself generally tends to overall (and it really is a stock standard Eclectic NeoPagan text down to the T) ... Not to mention how it toes an incredibly thin line close to appropriation, and, at bare minimum, absolutely participates in the cultural whitewashing of information presented.
Save your money. The book's worthless, on top of the kindle formatting itself generally being atrocious to try and read. You can find far better info elsewhere in every regard, I promise.