Anthology Winners!

5 Comments

Many thanks to Angie Mroczka (founder of Pagan Writers Press AND Pagan Writers Community) for such a generous weekend giveaway!

Yule Anthology cover                  Samhain Anthology cover

The first winner of the Yule Anthology is Jenna Nightwind.

The second winner (and consequently the first to enter) of the Yule Anthology is Jodine Turner. (need you to e-mail me at angieh@paganwriters.com)

The first winner of the Samhain Anthology is Jenna Nightwind – lucky witch!

The second winner of the Samhain Anthology is Widdershins.

Thanks to everyone for making this so much fun, and to all the authors for their selfless contributions.  🙂

If you’d like to buy your own copy they are available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble and the Pagan Writers Press website.

Pagan Writers Giveaway – Samhain

19 Comments

Samhain Anthology coverTo celebrate the completion of their second anthology (Yule), Pagan Writers Press is also offering two (2) physical copies of the Samhain Anthology.

Samhain marks the end of summer and the preparation for winter. To many, Samhain is merely Halloween, but to Pagans, it is a day when the veil between the worlds is thinnest, and we can reconnect with our beloved deceased. Samhain is a joyful celebration where we invite the spirits of our loved ones into our homes to remember and honor them.

Pagan Writers Presents Samhain is a collection of articles, poetry, and short stories. Forty Pagan writers have come together to express how we celebrate the holiday, to share their thoughts and feelings, and to entertain with stories that take place on or around the last week of October.

Leave your broom by the door and join us at the hearth as we tell you about the Sabbat known as Samhain.

Pagan Writers Presents Samhain is the first anthology in the Pagan Writers Press Sabbat collection.

All proceeds from the sale of this anthology further the mission of the Pagan Writers Community, an organization that seeks to edu­cate, inspire, and promote artists, authors, blog­gers, musi­cians, poets, and writers who follow alternative-faith spiritual and religious paths.

Winners will be drawn Sunday, January 22 at 8:00 pm EST – so get your entries in before then to be counted!

Leave a comment for your first entry.

You can receive one extra entry for each of the following:

  • “Like” the Pagan Writers Press on Facebook.
  • Blog about this giveaway.  Include link to post in comment as entry.
  • Tweet about this giveaway.  Include link to tweet in comment.

One entry per comment please!

Winners will be announced on the blog and notified by Sunday, January 22, 2012 at 9:00 pm EST.

Pagan Writers Giveaway – Yule Anthology

19 Comments

Yule Anthology cover

To celebrate the completion of their second anthology, Pagan Writers Press is offering two (2) physical copies of the Yule Anthology.

Come out of the snow and pull up a chair by the roaring fire! The Wheel has turned once more as we look to the morning sky, eyes waiting to welcome the reborn sun.

Yule, also known as the Winter Solstice, was an indication to our early ancestors that the long winter was half over and that they needed to start looking toward the spring planting season. Modern-day celebrants of this sacred Sabbat exchange gifts, feast, and spend time with friends and family.

Pagan Writers Presents Yule is a collection of articles, poetry, songs, and short stories. Thirty-four Pagan writers have come together to express how we celebrate the holiday, to share their thoughts and feelings, and to entertain with stories that take place on or around the Winter Solstice.

Throw off your coat, grab a mug of mulled wine, and join us at the hearth as we tell you about the Sabbat known as Yule.

Pagan Writers Presents Yule is the second anthology in the Pagan Writers Press Sabbat collection.

All proceeds from the sale of this anthology further the mission of the Pagan Writers Community, an organization that seeks to educate, inspire, and promote artists, authors, bloggers, musicians, poets, and writers who follow alternative-faith spiritual and religious paths.

Winners will be drawn Sunday, January 22 at 8:00 pm EST – so get your entries in before then to be counted!

Leave a comment for your first entry.

You can receive one extra entry for each of the following:

  • “Like” the Pagan Writers Press on Facebook.
  • Blog about this giveaway.  Include link to post in comment as entry.
  • Tweet about this giveaway.  Include link to tweet in comment.

One entry per comment please!

Winners will be announced on the blog and notified by Sunday, January 22, 2012 at 9:00 pm EST.

Book Giveaway: Pagan Writers Presents Samhain

24 Comments

The winner of this drawing will receive one (1) paperback copy of Pagan Writers Presents Samhain, edited by Camenæ E. deWelles, Angelique Mroczka, and Rosa Sophia, when the book is released.

The drawing for this giveaway will occur Friday, October 21st, around noon CST.  Entries (comments on Pagan Writers Community blog) must be dated before then to be counted.

To be entered for this drawing, please post a comment on this post with your answer to the following question:

What is your favorite memory from a past Samhain or Halloween?

Winner will be announced on the blog and notified no later than Tuesday, October 25th.

Book Giveaway: Pagan Writers Presents – Samhain

45 Comments

The winner of this drawing will receive one (1) paperback copy of “Pagan Writers Presents – Samhain,” edited by Camenæ E. deWelles, Angelique Mroczka, and Rosa Sophia, when the book is released.

The drawing for this giveaway will occur today, October 4th, around 8pm CST.  Entries (comments on Pagan Writers Community blog) must be dated before then to be counted.

To be entered for this drawing, please post a comment on this post with your answer to the following question:

What is your favorite thing about Samhain?

Winner will be announced on the blog and notified no later than Wednesday, October 5th.

Book Blurb – Anointed

Leave a comment

Anointed: A Devotional Anthology for the Deities of the Near and Middle East
by Tess Dawson and the Editorial Board of the Bibliotheca Alexandrina

You immerse your fingers in the warm sacred oil and sweep the golden liquid across your brow. Pungent myrrh incense billows and the air quivers with the words of an ancient prayer. Oil lamps flood the sanctuary with light and magic of the Near and Middle East.

Anointed is a collection of articles and art, poems and prayers, recipes and rituals inspired by Mesopotamia, Anatolia, Arabia, and the Levant. The Deities honored within include Athirat, Asherah, Baʻal Hadad, Tiamat, Astarte, Yahweh, Ereshkigal, Atargatis, ‘Anat, Inanna, Marduk, Allah, Tanit, Nikkal, Cybele, Attis, Ishtar, El, and more.

Cook a Sumerian dinner. Make a balm for dreams or a set of prayer beads. Celebrate the moon Mesopotamian-style or sing a hymn to a Hurrian Goddess. Learn about the indigenous polytheisms of the Near and Middle East and about their modern revivals. Let the joy of the Deities fill your life.

Anointed is the latest devotional anthology in Neos Alexandria’s Bibliotheca Alexandrina series, a collection of books dedicated to the Gods of Greece, Egypt, Rome, and the surrounding regions.

Book Excerpt – Annointed

Leave a comment

Excerpt from “A Ritual State of Mind” by Michele Briere

Getting a ritual together has been a headache. Literally. We need to remember that the old rites were for the temples only, not the general public. The rituals were also a specialized act, each priest had a specific part to which they spent their lives in training and practice. Many of the priest’s functions were passed down in their family, sons taking over for fathers. What few rituals we do have are written as though the reader understood what was happening. Some ritual prayers were written for us, some were not.

The main ritual that has been left to us is the Akitu, the Babylonian New Year Ceremony.1 I have taken this rite and broken it down to a monthly New Moon rite. From the main New Year Rite to the repair of the temple roof to the re-covering of the temple drum,2 which was a major ritual that took the entire temple to complete, each rite contained a great deal of food offerings and thanks to the gods.

The ancient Middle East really didn’t have a calendar as we know it; each city-state had their own rituals which were not necessarily on the same days as other city-states listed them.3 They counted years in the reign of whatever king was currently sitting on the throne. Months were sometimes messy due to the lunar cycle, and the king had the right to order another month put in place if his advisors informed him that more time was needed before the New Year. This straightened out the sometimes uneven years. New Year was twice a year according to our calendar, at the equinoxes. Sumer had two seasons, winter and summer. At the fall equinox, Dumuzi was reborn, released from his time in the underworld. During this time, the fields were sown, the growing plants representing Dumuzi’s return and his fertility in the sheepfold and the fields. At the spring equinox, Dumuzi “died”, returned to the underworld, and his sister, Geshtinanna, was reborn. Her name means Lady of the Vine. Summer was the time of vines.

This period was altered every other year. During the public part of the Akitu, which was a long and loud parade and celebration, the images of the gods were brought into the city, after having been floated down the river on a barge. The main images were of the gods Nabu and Bel, or Marduk. This was Babylonian, so Enki can be substituted for Marduk in the Sumerian rite, although I really don’t see them as being that close in character. I honestly don’t know how the “–ologists” came up with Marduk as a fertility image.

This parade of the gods represented fertility returning to the city. While one city was replanting their fields, the other city was letting their fields rest.

The Akitu spoke very strongly to me, but it took about fifteen days to complete, and needed a full temple of priests. I have altered this ritual for modern use. I first broke down the Akitu into steps, and then I took out the steps that were no longer applicable to modern, Western times, such as removing the role of the king. It can now be used for solitary use or as a group effort. These steps are in the order of the original Akitu festival, only simplified, with repetitive actions removed.

Writing a ritual can be tricky. Rituals can be as simple as being still for a moment and acknowledging the gods in a thank you, or getting out the arts and crafts box and giving a room or yard an overhaul.

Having taken the Akitu apart and separating the outdated material from what can still be used, and keeping the remaining steps in order, I spent an hour outside in our backyard walking through the format of the rite. After scratching my head in frustration, I realized why it wasn’t quite jiving—I was using my housemate’s circle. The temple rites were done in a temple. Duh! So I drew a rectangle in the dirt at the other end of the yard, drew the main altar in the northwest corner and the offering altar in the southeast corner, as stated noted in archaeological excavations. I stepped in from the east, and everything suddenly clicked together.

The main temples stood about seven stories high: mountains in that time period.4 At the top of the temple was a smaller penthouse, the gipar, which was the private sanctuary of the temple god, a place where only the high priest or high priestess, called the En, could enter. Steps ran the height of the temple on the east side.  The east was a place of beginning because it was where the sun arose each morning and the moon arose each evening. The west was the entrance to the underworld, the direction where the sun and moon set and presumed to be resting in the underworld. The sun was there daily, but since the moon is sometimes seen in the daylight, the moon only journeyed there once a month, during invisible moon when it was completely dark. New moon began about seven days later when the first crescent appeared.

The gods could be found in both heaven and the underworld. North represents heaven and west represents the underworld so I believe that the main altar should be in the northwest corner. East symbolizes fire, and south corresponds to earth; both fire and earth are transformative properties, so I believe the offering table was in the southeast corner. These are my own reasons, so there is no reference for this other than studying the myths for the cosmology.

The path of the sun was important, so entering the temple from the east seems logical to me. I follow the path of the sun from east to west and continuing around back to the east and I walk to the north, west, south, and back to east. I’m not going to get silly about this and insist that people turn only one way while in ritual, but for the purpose of entering, exiting, cleansing, and smudging, let’s follow the solar course.

Book Blurb – Shades of Faith

9 Comments

Shades of Faith: Minority Voices in Paganism
Edited by Crystal Blanton

Shades of Faith: Minority Voices in Paganism is an anthology that encompasses the voices and experiences of minorities within the Pagan community and addresses some of the challenges, stereotyping, frustrations, talents, history and beauties of being different within the racial constructs of typical Pagan or Wiccan groups.

Often the associations of the roots of Paganism have pushed assumptions that worshippers of Paganism are strictly Caucasian. The mainstreaming of Wicca has elevated images of worship and deity that connect with Celtic, Greek or Roman cultures. There are a lot of minority races that are practicing Pagans and are often having a myriad of experiences that are fashioned by the reality of walking between the worlds of their birth ancestry or culture and that of their spiritual culture. This anthology is an opportunity to share their stories and experiences with others around being the minorities within a minority spiritual community.

Some of the practitioners in this anthology practice paths that include (but are not limited to) Wicca, Voodoo, Umbanda, Shaman, Native and other Pagan paths.

Join us in celebrating the incredible diversity and beauty that encompass the harmony that has created the song of the Pagan community. The previously unheard voices of our community are now sharing the power of experience through the written word and through their voices.