I think Aphrodite is referring to a different book. I have the Element Encyclopedia of 5000 spells. It is an elegantly designed and well-marketed book and probably made lots of money for the author. It might be OK for a beginner who wants to "play" with spellcraft or get some background or inspiration, but I didn't like the book that much. Presumably a lot of the spells are from traditional folk culture. This is interesting on the one hand--but no real information is given on the source---little info is provided "in context"--and nothing is referenced, although there is a long bibliography at the back of the book . So the spells seem to be little bits of hearsay that the author accumulated from maybe picking things out of books she's read here and there(The bibliography looks more like a list of all the books the author ever read whether they have anything to do with spells or not--I've read some of 'em myself). Maybe teenagers or suburban housewife-witches like the short, unaccredited version of things, but I need more--and if the author went through the trouble of writing out her impressive bibliography, you would think she might 1)share some real academic info that she's gotten from those books and 2) specifically cite the book from which she got what information in the text. The fact is that she copied spells out of a couple of books and added a bunch of other books in her bibliography list to make it look very important. Also note that many of the spells include ingredients and instructions that a modern person would be hardpressed to put all together. A better approach would be to give instructions on the basics of spell casting --the underlying psychology instead of spell "recipes." What particularly burned me about the book is that pages and pages are dedicated to spells and potions from Hoodoo that can be found online at www.luckymojo.com OK, so it is compendium of spells. Like I said, it may give someone inspiration about how to put a spell together.(IMG:
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