Books
Shock! The Black Dog of Bungay
The tale of the Black Dog of Bungay and the infamous attack on the church of St. Marys in 1577, has inspired and fascinated residents and visitors to the town for centuries along with tales of Black Shuck the Ghostly Dog of Norfolk.
by Dr David Waldron and Christopher Reeve
Ten Years of Triumph of the Moon
Academic approaches to studying magic and the occult: examining scholarship into witchcraft and paganism, ten years after Ronald Hutton’s The Triumph of the Moon
edited by Dave Evans & Dave Green
Contributions by Ronald Hutton, Amy Hale, Sabina Magliocco, Dave Green, Henrik Bogdan, Phillip Bernhardt-House, R.A. Priddle, Geoffrey Samuel, Caroline Tully & Dave Evans.
Toastar!
by Francis Breakspear
This is a dizzying tour of some of the lunatic outer fringes of chaos magickal technique and what chaos is actually about, including tales of sigils fired off during a vasectomy operation, why we should perform healing spells to keep former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher alive, ways of riding the magic-meme-stream using the Charlie’s Angels Banishing Ritual of the Pentagram, plus much more!
If It Was Easy, Everyone Would Be Doing It…
by Francis Breakspear
This is NOT a self-help book….. So you want to learn about magic? Hell, how and where do you start? Here’s how. The author has been working as a magician in Britain for over 25 years, and this book is a distillation of huge practical experience and teaching.
Kaostar
by Francis Breakspear
This book is timely, in that there has existed for some time a need for balance in the expression of what magic is about, balance with the overarching fluffiness and ‘do-anything-as-long-as-it-is-white-light’ of modern paganism. ‘Harm None’ Wiccans will hate this- indeed, one who saw the initial manuscript called it‘simply monstrous’, and left.
Aleister Crowley and the 20th Century Synthesis of Magick
by Dave Evans
Both a professional academic researcher and practising magician, Dr Dave Evans delves into modern history to present a serious, but accessible and fascinating work, based on research work done for a Master of Arts degree on the history and literature of British magic, focussing especially on Aleister Crowley.
The History of British Magick After Crowley
by Dave Evans
Not just a book about the history of magic, this research places magicians and their work into the broader society that we all live in, and shows how that magic has always been a part of our culture.





