Book Description
The grannies of Appalachia practiced a magic born from necessity, isolation, and survival. This is not the sanitized witchcraft found in modern books. This is the real magic of people who stopped bleeding with whispered words, protected their homes with marks carved into door frames, and survived harsh winters through food blessed and stored with intention.
In these pages, you will find practices passed down through generations of mountain families-traditions mixing Scotch-Irish, German, Cherokee, and African American wisdom into something uniquely Appalachian. From moonshine tinctures that healed infections to graveyard dirt used for protection, from barn hex signs that kept livestock safe to thread magic woven into every stitch, these are the methods poor mountain people used when doctors were forty miles away and winter lasted six months.
Lana Wood learned these traditions directly from her grandmother and other mountain elders, practices that are dying as the old generation passes away. She writes with unflinching honesty about both the beauty and the darkness of this magic-the healing and the hexing, the blessings and the bindings, the sacred and the dangerous.
This book covers twelve essential areas of Appalachian folk magic:
Moonshine and plant medicine tincturesGraveyard dirt and sacred earth magicBarn hex signs and protective markingsBlood stopping and emergency healingFoot track magic and path workingCast iron cooking as spellworkLivestock charms and animal husbandry magicThread magic and fiber arts as bindingWater witching and creek baptismSacred tobacco traditionsFood preservation and root cellar magicPassing knowledge to the next generationWritten for those who want authentic mountain magic, not romanticized folklore, this book makes no apologies for the hard realities of Appalachian life or the sometimes harsh nature of the magic born from it. It includes practical techniques you can use while respecting the traditions and acknowledging where this knowledge came from.
If you are looking for light and love and positive energy, there are thousands of other books. This is about the magic of survival, the wisdom of people who had dirt floors and no running water, who made hard choices and did what needed doing. This is Appalachian granny magic, raw and real, preserved before it disappears entirely.