Title | : | Voices from the Ashes: Resurrecting the Wytch |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | - |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Kindle Edition |
Number of Pages | : | - |
Publication | : | Published October 24, 2020 |
Voices from the Ashes: Resurrecting the Wytch Reviews
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I finally finished reading “Voices From the Ashes, Resurrecting the Wytch” from Veneficia Publications while buried under blankets with my dog.
This book... it took me a long time to read it. It was so hard to read, but not because the poetry and prose within it’s pages was complicated.
It is beautifully written by multiple authors and compiled lovingly as a testament to the lives of the men and women resurrected in it’s pages.
It was hard to read because of the painful detail every author poured into each story and the emotions I felt as I turned each page.
There were times I had to put the book down and walk away from it because it was overwhelming to read the horrific accounts of torturous suffering that one human being could afflict on another.
These stories need to be told.
Each and every one of them has merit in today’s world of TikTok witches and Instagram esthetics portraying in vivid colors what people once died for.
If you dare to call yourself “Witch” you owe it to the men and women throughout history that had their lives brutally destroyed because of that title.
As you read this, keep in mind that the most current story of Ama Hemmah depicts her trial and death in 2010. This is not all ancient history, and at any time history could repeat itself.
To give credit where it is due, this book was compiled by Diane Narraway and Mariana Kiddle. They joined Earl Livings, Geraldine Lambert, Sem Vine, Fi Woods, Scott Irvine, Donna Hayward, Rachael Moss, Tarn Nemorensis, Issy Ballard, Lou Hotchkiss Knives, L. N. Cooper, Defoe Smith and Sam Geraghty in telling the stories of 23 men and women accused, tried and put to death for being witches.
www.veneficiapublications.com