The Confessions of Fiona

Mythology and Folklore of the Faeries

$24.95

Imprint: Crossed Crow Books
Availability: Coming soon on 12/27/2024

Book Details

Pages

220 Pages

Size

6 x 9

Format

Trade Paperback

Pub. Date

01/14/2025

ISBN

978-1-959883-92-0

Publisher

Crossed Crow Books

Authors

Steve Blamires is from the Isle of Arran in the west of Scotland, where the Gaelic language and Celtic culture are still strong. He began to study his native Celtic culture in his early teens, a task made all the easier due to where he lived and the languages he spoke. In 1993, he published his first book, The Irish Celtic Magical Tradition, to much acclaim. Several more books followed, including the first full biography of William Sharp/Fiona Macleod.
 

The Confessions of Fiona by Steve Blamires details the beliefs, stories, and tenets of the Sidhe as revealed by one of the Sidhe, Fiona Macleod. For twelve years, this faery woman laid out the entire mythology, pantheon, and rituals of the faeries themselves. This volume reveals, expands, and explains what we can learn from her.
 
The Secrets of the Sidhe Revealed!
 In 1893, the Scottish writer and mystic William Sharp (1855–1905) started writing under the name Fiona McLeod. The name Fiona did not exist before then, at least not in our world. For the following twelve years, Fiona wrote profusely of her own tradition; that is, the mythology and deities that the faeries recognize. None of these myths, legends, gods, or goddesses were known to humans prior to Fiona’s revelations.
 
Steve Blamires presents those concepts in his new book, The Confessions of Fiona. He has studied the esoteric faery tradition for thirty years. He presents a unique ritual system; previously unknown myths, legends, and gods and goddesses, offering insight to the modern researcher of this fascinating nonhuman magical body of work. Woven into the legends that the faeries share is a whole ritual magical tradition that humans can emulate with a basic knowledge of the Western magical tradition, the four festivals, the four magical tools, and what has come to be known as pathworking. But they are all significantly different from our human perspective.
 
Faeries are large, shockingly powerful, and, at times, cruel and dangerous. Steve shows how and when these mighty beings of ancient times were literally shrunken to become the Tinkerbells of popular imagery. Because of this important change of perspective, Steve includes in this book an in-depth look at the faery god Dalua—a truly dark, dangerous god but a necessary one.
 
To help readers access more of Fiona McLeod’s writings and teachings, Steve has included an appendix detailing all her essential works and scores of relevant direct quotations throughout the book.

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