Get Free Ebook The Voodoo Hoodoo Spellbook, by Denise Alvarado
Well, publication The Voodoo Hoodoo Spellbook, By Denise Alvarado will certainly make you closer to exactly what you are willing. This The Voodoo Hoodoo Spellbook, By Denise Alvarado will be consistently buddy whenever. You might not forcedly to consistently complete over reading an e-book simply put time. It will be just when you have downtime and spending couple of time to make you really feel pleasure with just what you check out. So, you can get the meaning of the notification from each sentence in the e-book.
The Voodoo Hoodoo Spellbook, by Denise Alvarado
Get Free Ebook The Voodoo Hoodoo Spellbook, by Denise Alvarado
The Voodoo Hoodoo Spellbook, By Denise Alvarado. In undergoing this life, numerous individuals always aim to do and obtain the most effective. New knowledge, experience, driving lesson, and also everything that can improve the life will certainly be done. Nonetheless, many individuals occasionally really feel puzzled to obtain those things. Really feeling the minimal of encounter and sources to be better is among the lacks to possess. However, there is a quite simple point that could be done. This is just what your teacher constantly manoeuvres you to do this. Yeah, reading is the solution. Reading a publication as this The Voodoo Hoodoo Spellbook, By Denise Alvarado as well as other references could enrich your life top quality. Exactly how can it be?
Obtaining guides The Voodoo Hoodoo Spellbook, By Denise Alvarado now is not sort of hard way. You can not just going for book store or collection or borrowing from your buddies to read them. This is a quite simple method to exactly obtain the publication by on-line. This on the internet e-book The Voodoo Hoodoo Spellbook, By Denise Alvarado could be one of the alternatives to accompany you when having extra time. It will certainly not waste your time. Think me, guide will certainly show you new point to read. Just spend little time to open this on the internet e-book The Voodoo Hoodoo Spellbook, By Denise Alvarado and also review them wherever you are now.
Sooner you obtain guide The Voodoo Hoodoo Spellbook, By Denise Alvarado, faster you can delight in reviewing the book. It will certainly be your rely on keep downloading guide The Voodoo Hoodoo Spellbook, By Denise Alvarado in provided web link. By doing this, you can truly choose that is offered to get your very own publication on-line. Right here, be the first to obtain guide qualified The Voodoo Hoodoo Spellbook, By Denise Alvarado and be the very first to understand exactly how the author suggests the notification and expertise for you.
It will certainly believe when you are going to choose this publication. This inspiring The Voodoo Hoodoo Spellbook, By Denise Alvarado e-book can be reviewed totally in certain time depending on just how commonly you open and review them. One to bear in mind is that every book has their own manufacturing to acquire by each viewers. So, be the excellent reader as well as be a far better individual after reviewing this publication The Voodoo Hoodoo Spellbook, By Denise Alvarado
The term "voodoo hoodoo" is used by Louisiana locals to describe the unique variety of Creole Voodoo found in New Orleans. In this book, you will find a plethora of authentic Voodoo and hoodoo rituals for love, justice, gambling luck, luck in court, prosperity, health, crossing, hexes, curse removal, and much more. The author has stripped the shroud of secrecy that has always surrounded Voodoo, and provides detailed instructions on everything from making gris-gris, magickal oils, talismans, and powders, to casting hexes.
- Sales Rank: #2186197 in Books
- Published on: 2009-03-25
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 9.00" h x .65" w x 6.00" l, .90 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 258 pages
About the Author
Denise Alvarado was born and raised in the Voodoo and hoodoo rich culture of New Orleans. She has studied mysticism and practiced Creole Voodoo and indigenous healing traditions for over three decades. She is a psychological anthropologist, writer, artist, spiritual adviser, and cultural consultant.
Most helpful customer reviews
151 of 165 people found the following review helpful.
The Voodoo Hoodoo Spellbook
By A Reviewer
If I were new to Hoodoo this book would lead me to believe a lot of things that aren't necessarily true, for instance, I might believe that I would have to practice Voodoo if I wanted to practice Hoodoo and vice-versa or, at least, include the Lwa. It could very well be that this is how New Orleanian practitioners of both work them together, but the practices outlined in this book should not be mistaken for practices in the broader tradition; in fact, I don't think they should be mistaken for the practices of all Rootworkers WITHIN New Orleans. It would make absolutely no sense for a strictly Catholic Rootworker to include the Lwa, Orisha, Nikisi or any other spirit found in an African Traditional Religion in their practice of Hoodoo. They would likely work with archangels, saints, and perhaps, Blackhawk, but not these spirits.
On the positive side, Alvarado does a great job of explaining that Voodoo and Hoodoo are two different practices and that Voodoo is a religion whereas Hoodoo is folk magic. It would have been nice if the author stated, for the sake of clarity, that this is how she practices the two together or that the book represents a very region-centric version of Hoodoo and Voodoo co-mingled that is unlikely to be found outside the State of Louisiana.
I strongly disagree with her assertion that in New Orleans the two are called "voodoo hoodoo" because they were melded together. They may be melded together in the author's practice or in the praxis of people who practice both, but, again, what is in this book doesn't represent all practitioners nor the broader Hoodoo Tradition. The number of people who practice Voodoo and Hoodoo together is smaller than the number of Catholics who practice Hoodoo, and the number of Catholic practitioners is very small; most practitioners are Protestant Christians. There is also plenty of documentation from Hyatt, Hurston, Lomax, and interviews done by members of the LWP during the Great Depression to prove Alvarado wrong or, at least, over-reaching in her statement.
Her explanation for why a gris-gris bag (a mojo) is called a gris-gris is straight out of fantasyland; I have to wonder if she made it up. The word "gris-gris" is French and does translate as "gray-gray", but it's just a Frenchified version of the Central African word "gree-gree" or "gri-gri" which means "charm" or "fetish" and fits what a mojo/gris-gris is, a charm/fetish bag.
The information on crossing/uncrossing, foot track magic, and floor washing is accurate, however, when it comes to floor washing or spiritual cleansing to remove something, you don't throw it out the front door or into your front yard as she states, which is about the worst thing you can do. This is spiritual junk you don't want anywhere on you or on your property. There are several things you can do with it: take it to the crossroads, take it to the street in front of the house and toss it, or as most practitioner do..let is go down the drain and then pour some ammonia down the drain to cleanse it. If you were using a spiritual bath to draw something to do you then you'd want to keep the water on your property. She also states under the same topic that, "hardcore Hoodoos" use their urine or the urine of a child in floor washing. I don't consider the use of personal concerns in any work to be "hardcore Hoodoo" I consider it the right, traditional, and most logical/effective way to connect myself to what I'm doing and increase the strength of the spell or to connect the target of the spell to the spell.
She says you can put powders in someone's drink or food. I've never heard of this, and ingesting talc is not a good idea. It contains carcinogens and has been related to the development of various cancers. New mothers are also being warned against using it on newborns because the dust particals are small enough to enter the lungs and can cause breathing problems. I was taught that you can place many, many things into a person's food or a drink, but never a powder.
Ihe information about the "Hoodoo altar" is way over the top. None of what she lists is absolutely necessary, for instance, unless you are a Catholic working with saints you don't need saint prayer cards. That isn't to say that there are no Rootworkers who keep elaborate altars only that not everyone does and neither way is right or wrong.
The author lists large quantity of stones, yet very few stones and minerals are used and can be counted on less than two hands. It doesn't mean you can't use Aventurine if you wanted to, but doing so is not Hoodoo. Back in the day most practitioners couldn't afford precious or semi-precious stones so they didn't use them.
Under the Assorted Objects and Curios couple of things caught my eye that I have a problem with: the inclusion of Bluestone and what she says about the Black Cat Bone. Bluestone is not a stone it's copper sulfate and is extremely, extremely toxic. If it is still used in industry today the people dealing with it are wearing haz-mat suits because touching it unprotected can poison a person through their skin. In Hoodoo, Bluestone was long, long ago replaced with Laundry Bluing and she doesn't even list Laundry Bluing. I can see some poor soul, who doesn't know any better, end up getting some of this stuff and killing themselves with it.
Likewise, next to the listing for a Black Cat Bone she tells the reader to get chicken bones painted black instead. Sorry, but this is a stupid, stupid statement; she should have just left the Black Cat Bone off the list. A chicken bone painted black isn't a substitute for a Black Cat Bone and never will be!! A Black Cat Bone can only be obtained through a very inhumane process that kills the cat. It is alleged to give the owner of the bone the same abilities the Toad Bone gives in English Folk Magic, including invisibility. A chicken bone painted black will never do these things. As far as I know dried chicken feet, black hen's feathers, and black hen's eggs can all be used for cleansing, but these two animals don't do the same thing, obviously. I really have to wonder if she just made up this nonsense.
Under Formulas she includes three known sources, Cat Yronwode, Ray Malbrough's "Charms, Spells, and Formula's, and Herman Slater's "Magical Formulary". Catherine Yronwode's recipes can be trusted as is, but I would check her book Hoodoo Herb and Root Magic before I used Malbrough's stuff just to make sure it was correct; I wouldn't waste my time with Slater's book. It's full of incorrect information and whatever is correct he plagiarized from someone else without giving credit where it was due. One recipe book I do recommend is The Conjure Cookbook by Talia Felix.
She states that ritual bathing is used when facing negative stuff; however, ritual/spiritual bathing can be done for any reason and is often included as part of spellwork. The instruction she gives for spiritual/ritual bath is severely lacking. Nowhere does she state that spiritual cleansing has to be done before sunrise, that if drawing good things the bath should also be taken at dawn, and if trying to get rid of something the bath should be done at twilight. She also doesn't mention directionality regarding the left over bath water. She includes baths with a few as one ingredient when few Rootworkers would make a bath with only one ingredient. As far as the rest of the baths: white, yellow etc. these have nothing to do with Hoodoo; they are used in Vodou/Voodoo in connection with the Lwa.
Alvarado writes that gris-gris can consist of a doll or a bag. Well, maybe in New Orleans or in Alvarado's practice they do, but you won't get that answer if you ask most Rootworkers. In Hoodoo a mojo/gris-gris is a mojo and a doll-baby/dollie is a doll-baby/dollie. The primary difference is that a doll-baby is used to influence a person because once it is named and baptized it becomes that person. A mojo doesn't represent a person, and is never treated the same way a doll-baby is.
She also writes: "You should only put an odd number of items into your gris-gris bag; never less than three and never more than thirteen." This is one of those unnecessary "musts/shoulds". You can use any number of ingredients you want to, some people count their ingredients and some people don't; neither way is wrong. Some people follow the "odd number" practice and some don't, neither way is wrong. There are no rules in Hoodoo concerning counting or the amount of ingredients, although, someone using more than 13 might signify someone who isn't quite sure of what they are doing. The most important aspect of ingredients is getting the most effective ones for the job not how many a person is using.
Here's another unnecessary must: "Color symbolism is important. Choose a color specific to your need." No, isn't not and no, you don't have to. Prior to the 1940's Hoodoo practitioners used only two colors: black for harmful work and white for beneficial work because colored candles where too expensive, and a few Rootworkers will still work like this. Likewise, some Rootworkers only use red flannel for mojo/gris-gris regardless of what its purpose is and some don't. Again, there are no rules regarding this.
The author tells the reader not to use Goofer Dust and only includes it because for historical value...give me a break. She is attempting to insert her own ethics into someone else's practice. If she isn't comfortable using Goofer Dust then she shouldn't, but few Rootworkers would appreciate being told what type of magic they should or shouldn't practice. Then she also claims that it can be used for protective purposes, yeah, good luck with that one. It sounds like she's taken a few lessons from the Stephanie Rose Bird School of Hoodoo. Despite what she claims, Goofer Dust has absolutely NO protective qualities to it; it is used to harm and only to harm. In some parts of the country "goofer dust" or "gopher dust" is another name for graveyard dirt, but this is a very region-centric term and is not common in the wider tradition. If you call a supplier and tell them you want this stuff thinking you are going to get graveyard dirt you're going to be in for a big, unpleasant surprise.
Graveyard dirt can be used to help or harm it all depends on the spirit of the dead you're working with, but graveyard/spirit work is not beginner's work as a lot can go wrong with frighteningly bad results.
The chapter on Talismans is so full of nonsense and misdirection I'm not even sure where to start other than to say that this chapter isn't Hoodoo or Voodoo. If anything, it's eclectic Neo-Pagan or Wiccan-style magic, and some inclusions are irresponsible: for instance, a veve is used to call the Lwa it belongs to, and if you don't know how to serve them I wouldn't suggest drawing one. She includes the veve for the Lwa Marinette yet Marinette has a reputation in Haitian Vodou for being dangerously aggressive and "does not suffer fools" as I was once told by a Haitian Vodou Mambo.
In the Spells chapter we have eclecticism run amok. I didn't look at each and every spell, but what I see in this chapter is the same thing I saw in Dorothy Morrison's Utterly Wicked and Stephanie Rose Bird's books: Neo-Pagan spells made with Hoodoo parts, and include everything but the kitchen-sink. The Neo-Paganism includes, but is not limited to: emphasis on the four directions when Hoodoo really only deals with east and west; emphasis on working on a specific day of the week (some do and some don't); following moon phases (some do and some don't); all those Blessed Be's; the use of a bind Rune, Sumerian symbolism, and creating "sacred space" when Rootworkers don't cast circles; nor do the Elements/Elementals play any kind of role in Hoodoo.
Likewise, her method of "consecrating" objects is purely Neo-Pagan and not used in Hoodoo. She also says to empower, which is unnecessary as far as most Rootworkers are concerned. Since Hoodoo is animistic and everything contains a spirit whatever curios/ingredients the Rootworker is using are already "empowered" to accomplish the task the Rootworker needs done. All the Rootworker has to do is focus and tell the spirits in the curios what needs to be done in the form of some type of recitation. She is really making things more complicated then they need to be.
Her statement that "crossing spells are a form of foot track magic" is wrong. Crossing spells can be accomplished in many, many different ways including using foot track magic, but the two are not the same thing and foot track magic can be used for other things besides crossing someone. She also separates crossing spells from curses, jinxes, and hexes when these are just other words for the same thing; however, the word "hex" is rarely used in Hoodoo. It's German and found more commonly in Pow-wow or English Folk Magic.
In the instances where she references Hurston's "Mules and Men" there is something more authentically Hoodoo, but even Hurston was known for using creative license and making things up so if you use anything that came out of Mules and Men check it out first even though it's probably legit. If you choose to use any of these spells do some research beforehand. Personally, I wouldn't trust anything she's written here without investigating it and if any of it "feels" Neo-Pagan you can rest assure it isn't Hoodoo or Voodoo.
Final Note from the Author section
Why, why, why do these authors or their publishers insist on including the Three-fold Law or Karma in books like this? Neither of these concepts have any place in Voodoo or Hoodoo. I would imagine that being a religion, Voodoo, has some type of code of conduct, but if it's anything like Haitian Vodou it sure isn't either of these.
Hoodoo doesn't have any type of built-in ethics so ethics vary from one person to the next and one's ethics are nobody else's business. If a practitioner wants to believe in things like TFL or Karma that is their choice, but most practitioner of Voodoo or Hoodoo don't subscribe to such beliefs.
Bibliography
I think it's strange that she includes Hyatt's "Folklore of Adams Cty, IL." in the book. There's no doubt that FACI is a great collection of folklore, but it's hardly southern folklore. She would have done better using Folk Beliefs of the Southern Negro-1926 by Newbell Niles Puckett or Ozark Folk Magic and Superstition by Vance Randolph.
It's also sad that she referenced Malbrough's Hoodoo Mysteries for this book. Hoodoo Mysteries is junk unless you want Wiccanized pseudo-Hoodoo. Generally, most Rootworkers write off Hoodoo Mysteries as his worse book, and don't recommend it to anyone.
This book doesn't start off bad and does contain some good information; however, it falters in putting that information to use in an authentic manner. As far as quality, in some ways this book is better than Stephanie Rose Bird's books, Malbrough's "Hoodoo Mysteries", or Morrison's "Utterly Wicked" and in others it's just as bad as far as misinformation, a lack of correct basic information, eclecticism run amok, calling something Hoodoo or Voodoo when it clearly isn't, and in some cases inclusions that are just plain dangerous. Despite it's title it isn't about practicing New Orleans-style Voodoo or Hoodoo; it's Neo-Pagan magic with some Voodoo and Hoodoo thrown in much like other books published in this genre over the last several years. This doesn't mean that what she includes won't work only that it isn't what the author claims it is.
24 of 32 people found the following review helpful.
Exactly what I wanted to write myself, but...
By Sara M. Kay
...Denise Alvarado beat me to it!
I bought this book from Denise's website "The Mystic Voodoo" along with the companion CD (which has extra occult texts and material not in the book), and couldn't be happier with my purchase. While the term "Voodoo Hoodoo" might throw off some viewers, the writer is clear in the proper definitions of both Voodoo AND Hoodoo early on in the book. This is chocked full of information regarding the Loa, Catholic saints, magic, folk remedies, superstitions, recipes for occult oils, rootwork and just about everything else. A great introduction to both New Orleans Voodoo and Hoodoo, a must-buy for those interested in these paths.
I would also recommend the following as companion purchases: Hoodoo Herb and Root Magic: A Materia Magica of African-American Conjure, Dr. Snake's Voodoo Spellbook and Jambalaya: The Natural Woman's Book of Personal Charms and Practical Rituals.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
It's ok-ish.......
By Dana
The Voodoo Hoodoo Spellbook is okay-ish. It has some interesting things in it. If I knew someone that already had it, I would have asked to borrow it & not have bought it. The author states she kept the wording the way she had it past to her & due to that, she had a 'translation' glossary to help better understand the wording. I would have liked a more in depth glossary. There were words that I didn't know the meaning of/had never seen and they were not in the glossary. Some readers (like me) are beginners, so some of the terminology was like trying to understand Martian. I had to go online to look up words... I kinda lost interest in the book.......
The Voodoo Hoodoo Spellbook, by Denise Alvarado PDF
The Voodoo Hoodoo Spellbook, by Denise Alvarado EPub
The Voodoo Hoodoo Spellbook, by Denise Alvarado Doc
The Voodoo Hoodoo Spellbook, by Denise Alvarado iBooks
The Voodoo Hoodoo Spellbook, by Denise Alvarado rtf
The Voodoo Hoodoo Spellbook, by Denise Alvarado Mobipocket
The Voodoo Hoodoo Spellbook, by Denise Alvarado Kindle
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar