The wheel of the year An illustrated guide to nature's rhythms

Fiona Cook

Book - 2023

Magic connects living things to each other. This book is not so much about learning how to do magic: it is about learning how to find and recognize magic. As you build a relationship with your environment, you tap into the magic and power inside and beyond your self. Roux takes readers through the cycle of one year and shows how it is divided into eight spokes: two solstices, two equinoxes, and four cross-quarter days that fall between those significant alignments between the Sun and the Earth. By setting your intentions for the six weeks between spokes, you can make each season-- each day!-- special. -- adapted from "Magic is real".

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Subjects
Genres
Young adult nonfiction
Published
Kansas City : Andrews McMeel Publishing 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Fiona Cook (author)
Other Authors
Jessica Roux (illustrator)
Physical Description
xii, 244 pages : color illustrations ; 27 cm
ISBN
9781524874803
  • Let's be safe
  • Magic is real
  • Ostra: Spring equinox
  • Beltane
  • Midsummer: Summer solstice
  • Lunasa
  • Mabon: Autumn equinox
  • Samhain: all Hallows' eve
  • Yule: Winter solstice
  • IMBOLC.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A thorough, accessible, yearlong walk through the seasons. Speaking to her readers in a wise whisper, Cook proclaims that there's real magic in this world--it's all around us, and kids have a special knack for seeing it. She sets out to help readers "find and recognize magic," starting with Ostara, the spring equinox, and rolling through the wheel of the year to Imbolc, a cross-quarter fire festival halfway between the winter solstice and the spring equinox. The book carefully and meaningfully lays out the rhythms of the wheel, describing festivities like the Scandinavian Midsommar or Juhannus celebrations for summer solstice and Latin American Día de los Muertos remembrances. It provides suggestions for individual nature-based spiritual practices and activities, including crafts and scavenger hunts that involve multiple senses. The book includes recipes using herbs, berries, and fungi (along with safety information for the kitchen and foraging) and guidance for refreshing your altar to welcome the energy of the incoming season. It also references non-Western cultural practices and explains cultural appropriation, giving readers context about the sacred Native American practice of smudging, and it suggests gathering herbs other than sage to bundle and burn. Cook's obvious wealth of knowledge and care in explaining both the light and dark of the world around us is complemented perfectly by Roux's charming, delicate illustrations of natural objects, critters both cute and crawly, and racially diverse young people. This book is, in a word, immaculate. A graceful invitation that children will happily accept. (glossary) (Nonfiction. 8-14) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.