Book Recommendations for Beginners

I strongly recommend all four books below to people just starting to learn about Wicca.  In particular, I stress reading Thea Sabin’s book first as it sets down basic fundamentals that a lot of other sources ignore.  I place Deborah Lipp’s book last because she talks about why we do certain things in ritual.  As such, having some basic knowledge to build upon is immensely helpful.

Reviews are below.

Thea Sabin, Wicca for Beginners

I’m not sure a book on Wicca has ever been given a more appropriate title. Wicca for Beginners delivers exactly what it promises: truly introductory material for those just beginning to investigate Wicca. It makes no presumptions about what the reader knows, and it doesn’t get ahead of itself.

It’s meant to be more informative than instructive, which is an approach sorely lacking in available materials today. While there are various basic exercises to assist in understanding, Sabin is far more interested in explaining basic premises and beliefs – the kind of information that will be foundational for Wiccan students as they move on to other books and more complex understandings of Wicca.

Sabin also generally avoids specific ritual. She sometimes gives some examples of phrasings, and she gives some basic outlines for practices, but she steers clear from concrete instructions telling you how many times to turn around or what incense you have to burn. Those details can all come later. Right now a reader needs to understand the bare basics, and this book is superb in delivering it.

By focusing on very rudimentary beliefs, I hope that Sabin’s book is also useful for people still trying to figure out if Wicca is for them. If these beliefs simply don’t make sense to a reader, that should be taken a very strong hint that Wicca is perhaps not the religion for them. That will certainly spare someone the wasted effort of memorizing a bunch of rituals only to find finally find out that the rituals are based on ideas he or she doesn’t agree with or are addressed to beings to whom they have no relationship.


 

Scott Cunningham, Wicca: A Guide for the Solitary Practitioner and Living Wicca: A Further Guide for the Solitary Practitioner

Cunningham is considered by some to be extremely Fluffy Bunny:

  • He was one of the authors instrumental in the proliferation of the idea that Wicca can encompass just about everything
  • He popularized the concept of “the All,” which encourages some to think they can easily merge Christianity and Wicca without serious consideration of the two belief systems.
  • He is the author most likely to be quoted by someone who’s only read book and thinks they’re an expert, although that’s not Cunningham’s fault.
  • He’s fairly white-lighter – he suggests that his readers not even deal with deities associated with death or destruction, for instance

These books are very simplistic, but there’s a reason for that: they are for beginners. They are definitely not to be taken as the definitive book on Wicca (no book should), but they are a solid base from which to work. And while the details can annoy more established Wiccans, his general ideas are sound.  The white-lighter tendencies are an issue, for example, but they still  down a strong moral base. These are books from which to grow.

It’s also important not to confuse his general chapters on Wicca with his examples of personal practices.  This layout is meant to show how individuals can take Wiccan principles and structure them into a personalized system.  It’s not laying down those personal ideas as Wiccan dogma, suggesting that every Wicca should or does follow them.

He also doesn’t get bound up in “spells,” as many books from the 1980s and 90s do.  This is a book truly about Wicca.

Many of his detractors also tend to conveniently forget that they started with Cunningham’s books too.


Deborah Lipp, Elements of Ritual: Air, Fire, Water & Earth in the Wiccan Circle

In a market of spellbooks, Wicca 101 guides, and witchy-coolness, the appearance of Lipp’s book is a startling breath of fresh air. From start to finish, Elements of Ritual walks the reader through every step of a Wiccan ritual. It is not, however, telling us what words we have to recite or what gestures are required. Instead, it is an in-depth guide to the meaning of each step. Lipp reminds us that whether we are writing our own rituals or repeating something taught, the gestures mean very little on their own, becoming truly energized only once we understand them.

Lipp centers her construction of ritual around the four elements, considering them the foundation of a traditional Wiccan circle. Moreover, she explains why, something decidedly lacking in much Wiccan literature. She stresses balance in the overall construction of rituals, reflecting a core belief of Wicca.

Finally, while she encourages readers to develop their own rituals, she provides copious examples to illustrate her points – examples that I could actually see myself using, as opposed to the average published Wiccan ritual which reads like it comes from a B-rate fantasy movie.

7 Comments to "Book Recommendations for Beginners"

  1. June 27, 2014 - 7:09 pm | Permalink

    I find Maiden Moon, by Simon Craft- available free online- pretty good for beginners too.

  2. Will's Gravatar Will
    October 1, 2014 - 10:41 pm | Permalink

    In respect to Cunningham, I think people sometimes forget that he was trying to promote Wicca/magic in a time when it was still “new” and there was a lot of suspicion about it. I remember when I was growing up that Dungeons & Dragons and Ouija boards were still being cited in instances of murder (i.e. he played D&D which ‘obviously’ led to him murdering people; these days the culprit video games) 😛

  3. aeschine's Gravatar aeschine
    December 26, 2014 - 12:54 pm | Permalink

    Thank you! As a beginner, I am still gathering information and trying to find my way through the vast forest of books, blogs and sites. I have read Cunningham, but now feel I need something with a bit more “meat” to it? Does that make sense? What do you recommend for the “next level”?

  4. September 29, 2015 - 12:40 am | Permalink

    I would say with these to recommend Paul Huson’s “Mastering Witchcraft”. While not technically Wiccan, it uses the same things, however, it includes the old system of avenging and protection. Something modern books exclude while touting “harm none”. (Rede means advice anyway and all the BTW’s I talk to aren’t afraid of cursing if need be.) Paul also gives some origins about where some things come from, mentioning Kabbalah and older occult practices.

    I usually recommend Scott for those beginning witchcraft and/or Wicca, too. But I include similar disclaimers. I started out with this book and I credit it for my transformation.

  5. Bekah's Gravatar Bekah
    October 6, 2015 - 9:33 pm | Permalink

    What about Christopher Penczek? I am reading his material, and I like how he focuses on beliefs first, then the inner temple, rather than the rituals, which I find way more helpful. I just find many conflicting ideas on who to read and who not to.

  6. ErinMarie's Gravatar ErinMarie
    October 14, 2017 - 7:58 am | Permalink

    I just stumbled upon this site while searching for info about Silver Ravenwolf and I am so happy I found it! What a treasure trove of knowledge there is here! Do you lovely folks know of other pagan/Wicca websites that have forums and offer discussion topics, current events, blogs, etc? I know of WitchVox but it doesn’t seem like it’s been updated in a long time. Tia :)

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