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Here at the New Age Journal, we have the pleasure of reviewing a remarkable amount of new books from New Age Authors around the world. Our staff of reviewers are comprised of not only the staff here at New Age Journal, but also by a specially selected outside reviewers.
Each week you will find our latest reviews posted here for your viewing pleasure. Coming soon these books will be available in our very own New Age Journal Books store. Stay Tuned for our Grand Opening.
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2006
The Practice of Ally WorkMeeting and Partnering with your spirit Guide in the Imaginal WorldBy Jeffrey Raff
Published by Nicholas-Hays; Publication Date: August 2006$14.95; ISBN0-89254-121-0 Catagory: Psychology The practice of Ally Work is one of many methods used to help one connect with the face of their divine being or God Face as Jeffrey puts it. The Author incorperates concepts from many different paths, such as, the works of Carl Jung, Alchemy, Sufi practices and Jeffery's own forty years of experience in this field. By using detailed step by step exercises and some examples from other paths, the reader is given the chance to actually practice each phase from beginner to advanced. The book is easy to read and continually repeats the key steps involved. All in all a good read and a welcomed edition to anyone's library. Laura Wandrie - New Age Journal Unveiling the Archetypal Cosmos
Book Review: Cosmos and Psyche: Intimations of a New World View, by Richard Tarnas, PhD., Viking Press, 2006. Review by Renn Butler.
In the lineage of Plato and the neo-Platonists, the Idealists and Romantics, and more recently the work of C. G. Jung, Tarnas reintroduces the concept of archetypes that has played such a fundamental role in Western culture. The archetypes have been recognized at various times as Homeric deities, Platonic metaphysical essences, Jungian psychological principles, and many other overlapping forms. In Cosmos and Psyche’s bold hypothesis, Tarnas suggests that the dynamic interplay of these timeless universals that have shaped and permeated our history occurs in coincidence with geometrical alignments between the planets and the earth, intelligible through an emerging epistemology and method of analysis he calls archetypal astrology.
A highly respected cultural historian, Tarnas gained international acclaim with his best-selling The Passion of the Western Mind (1991), which has become required reading in university courses around the world. He now marshals his formidable intellect to present five hundred pages of compelling evidence to support the archetypal astrological hypothesis. Here are the grand lines of Western history: scientific and technological revolutions, social and political awakenings, cycles of creativity and expansion, of crisis and contraction, of conservative empowerment, spiritual epiphanies, and Dionysian awakenings. With a staggering depth and breadth of scholarship Tarnas draws upon periods such as the Axial Age in the mid 6th century BCE that saw the birth of Greek philosophy, Taoism, Buddhism, and Confucianism, through Periclean Athens to the birth of Christianity, Petrarch and the giants of the Renaissance, and on to Romanticism, feminism, postmodernism, and the counterculture. He has an uncanny ability to illuminate the essential nature of figures such as Sappho, Aeschylus, Descartes, Shakespeare, Melville, Nietzsche, Rachel Carson, Betty Friedan, and hundreds more, bringing these cultural giants and the archetypes they embody to life before our eyes. Tarnas’ correlation of these narrative trajectories in our history with cyclical alignments of the outer planets paints a portrait of vibrant historical meaning and purpose, a highly complex yet coherent and intelligible patterning of archetypal principles unfolding over time.
Tarnas presents for the layperson his method of analysis for perceiving archetypes in history as well as in individual experience, essentially offering the reader a telescope to look at the evidence for him or herself. He recognizes and even celebrates the virtue of skepticism, as Santayana did when he referred to skepticism as “the chastity of the intellect.” Yet Tarnas goes further, reminding us that while “the mind that seeks the deepest intellectual fulfillment does not give itself up to every passing idea,” what is sometimes forgotten is that the purpose of skepticism is not to be an end in itself but to prepare us to be ready when a new and deeper truth finally arrives.
In contrast with traditional astrological belief and practice, the archetypal astrology he introduces is non-fatalistic and non-deterministic. Because of the multivalent and multidimensional nature of the archetypes—their basic formal patterning that manifests in a diverse range of concrete expressions—he believes that archetypal astrology is archetypally predictive rather than concretely predictive. Although long-term planetary alignments can illuminate many essential characteristics of an historical epoch or individual life experience, and even suggest basic expected characteristics of an upcoming period, the specific concrete expression the archetypes will take at any time is indeterminate, contingent on factors such as cultural context, free will, co-creative participation, and perhaps unmeasurables such as karma and grace. In this understanding, precious human autonomy and creative potency are maintained, while individual selfhood is recontextualized within a now reenchanted cosmos.
With its open-minded spirit of hypothesis, empirical observation, and ongoing theoretical refinement, this book is a scientific triumph, scientific in the highest sense of the word: Here is the evidence, and here is a possible theory to explain the evidence. Most importantly, the correlations in Tarnas’ methodology are replicable. Anyone with a knowledge of the basic tools of this method of analysis, which he carefully introduces, can investigate the patterning of archetypal principles in his or her own life. To preemptively criticize this body of research without actually investigating it, to refuse to look through the telescope for oneself, might, I believe, be symptomatic of a vested emotional position rather than a genuinely scientific attitude toward the evolution of knowledge.
Tarnas writes that the fundamental component in a cultural paradigm is its cosmology. The cosmology of a world view is the place, the context within which that world view exists and flourishes. With Cosmos and Psyche I believe the emerging new paradigm finally has its missing component: an essentially Platonic-Pythagorean cosmos which is intelligibly ordered by archetypal patterns of meaning and experience, and in which the macrocosm of the solar system mirrors archetypal processes in the microcosm of human life. In this cosmology the highest and most treasured capacities of human reason and cognition are ultimately recognized as expressions of the universe’s own intelligence. But, integrating the modern development of an autonomous self, the human being is also recognized as having both freedom and responsibility for consciously and creatively enacting these powerful forces in the most life-enhancing forms possible.
The Promethean successes of Western culture have transformed the world in stupendously positive but also deeply problematic ways. Perhaps underlying our culture’s less salutary features remains some fundamental omission or projection in our vision of the universe. Perhaps the “bright dawn of our modernity” has hidden a grand intelligence and purposefulness that both transcends and informs the human mind, a consciousness imbedded in the universe itself. Tarnas suggests that our long moral and intellectual evolution has prepared us to forge a new kind of relationship with that cosmos, transforming our role within it from peripheral byproduct to co-creative partner and explorer. With this book Tarnas has succeeded in unveiling what only a few years ago might have seemed impossible: an accessible bridge between the mainstream high culture and an emerging world view that returns the soul to the cosmos.
Renn Butler
is a writer and health care worker in Victoria, B.C.
About the author: Richard Tarnas is a cultural historian and professor of philosophy and depth psychology whose first book, The Passion of the Western Mind, became both a bestseller and required reading at many universities. A graduate of Harvard University, he is the founding director of the Philosophy, Cosmology, and Consciousness graduate program at the California Institute of Integral Studies in San Francisco, and also teaches on the faculty of Pacifica Graduate Institute in Santa Barbara.
2005 Aisha's Moonlit Walk By Anika Stafford
I have to tell you I was absolutely THRILLED to see this book on Pagan traditions written for children. A beautifully written book with stories and celebrations for the Pagan year as told by Aisha, a child of Pagan parents. Each story has a lesson and is followed by activities exercises and things to talk about for children and the family for that matter. What a truly magickal book this is. There is really very little out there on the market today geared specifically towards young children growing up Pagan. This book is indeed a treasure and a must have for the Pagan Family Library!! Laura M. Wandrie, New Age Journal Online
John Dee Charlotte Fell Smith Introduction by R.A. Gilbert IBIS Press - An Imprint of Nicholas-Hays, Inc IBSN: 0-89254-104-0 $55.00
A great deal has been written on the man, John Dee, expressing a wide range of views. During his lifetime, many took a dim view of his work and he gained a somewhat infamous reputation, but as times passed, his reputation, knowledge, and work has been looked at in an entirely different light.
So exactly who was John Dee? Was he, as some would lead you to believe, an occultist and dabbler in the black arts? Was he a deeply Christian man loyal to his church and religion simply searching for the truth. Some write of his great skills as a mathematician, astrologer, philosopher, and alchemist. A mystic, if you will.
There are rumors by those who believe and have speculated that John Dee was the founder of and headed up the Rosicrucian Fraternity. He has also been accredited with having authored the "Treatise on the Rosie Crucian Secrets." Many have had their theories on this particular rumor throughout the years. To this day, there is no solid, factual evidence that this is true. It is this writers opinion and belief that much of his knowledge and findings *may* have been used as a basis for this group and the historical Treatise, however, I have yet to find irrefutable proof of his direct involvement.
What is clear, is that John Dee was indeed an occultist, alchemist, philosopher, mathematician, astrologer, mystic, loyal to his own religion, but a seeker of truth. He was a true Renaissance man.
I found this latest work on John Dee by Charlotte Fell Smith to be a very objective work on the life and times of this enigmatic man which includes many entries from his own diaries and papers. We may never know all there is to know about the life and workings of this man or of the valuable knowledge he had discovered, as there are many gaps in his written papers and diaries. However, Ms Smith took great strides in giving the reader a deeper insight into John Dee and his lifetime devotion to the acquisition of knowledge. One thing is for sure, and that is that John Dee was deeply devoted to his work, his queen, and his country. He was a man way before his time as he attempted to discover the many secrets of this world we live in and pass this on for others. He had a unquenchable thirst for knowledge and devoted his life to his work.
All in all an excellent book and a necessary edition to the library of all serious students of mysticism and the occult.
Laura Wandrie, New Age Journal Online
December 2004 A Hidden Order Winter Robinson ISBN: 1-59003-084-2
Uncover the secrets from within, learn to recognize the signs that will lead you on a journey of personal discovery with this informative and extremely well written book by Winter Robinson. Each of us is here to serve a purpose, through society's dictates and rules, our ability to know what that purpose is has been sorely handicapped. Winter shows you how to throw off that controlling programing and go within to discover your purpose and the meanings of life. Nothing every happens by accident, there is always a reason. I highly recommend this book to all seekers, whatever path your on. Through the readings, exercises, and examples in this book you too can discover The Hidden Order of your life. EXCELLENT!!! Laura, New Age Journal Online
October 2004
Images in the Heavens, Patterns on the Earth The I Ching Photographs by Janet Russek and David Scheinbaum Introduction by Jonathan Porter ISBN: 0-89013-427-8
This book is a work of Art. Beautiful Photo's coupled with the meanings of the I Ching combinations makes for a wonderful mix of Art and Learning. Complete with symbols, patterns and meanings, this book has it all. Extremely informative and and a joy to study. Laura, Newage Journal
Guardians of the Holy Grail - Mark Amaru Pinkham
A complete and well written history of the Holy Grail and Knights Templars. Mark brings many astounding facts to light in this engrossing history of the Holy Grail. A must have for any student of the Grail Mysteries. Laura - Newage Journal
September 1, 2004
*** Editor's Choice ***
Broken Gourds By Beresford McLean ISBN 0-9753297-0-7 US $15.95
As an avid reader, I'm always excited when I come across such a fantastic book as Broken Gourds. Told in the warm vibrant style of story tellers from long ago, Broken Gourds is one of the best books I've read in a while. Set in a small village in Jamaica, its a story about traditions, religion, superstitions, and change as carried down through the generations of the village's residents. From the moment I picked it up, I became instantly transported to this little village in Jamaica. I simply could not put it down. Beresford McLean is a Master Story Teller
Laura Wandrie - New Age Journal
Now Available in our Newage Journal Books Store
Week of August 22, 2004
The Thirteenth Man - By Rudy Pizarro
GMA Publishing ISBN 1-59268-052-6 US $14.00 UK £ 9
An enlightening book giving the reader much food for thought. A story set in Las Vegas, "Sin City" of the U.S., it revolves around the life of one man in particular who one moment finds himself living the high life, the next moment he has lost everything. His life and the the lives of his four closest friends are changed dramatically by the revelations he discovers after losing every thing he thought was important. Great Read.
Chi Kung for Beginners Master the flow of Chi for Good Health, stress reduction & Increased Energy By Scott Shaw, PhD
Llewellyn ISBN: 0-7387-0419-9 US $12.95 Can $19.95
Chi Kung for beginners is a well written informative guide for beginners and experts alike who wish to improve their lives and health through the practice of Chi Kung. Photos help illustrate each exercise and the text is easy to follow. I highly recommend this book for anyone wishing to learn more about the benefits of Chi Kung. Laura Wandrie - 2nd Dan - New Age Journal
The Book of Formation or Sepher Yetzirah Attributed to Rabbi Akiba Ben Joseph Translated by Knut Stenring Forward by R.A. Gilbert Introduced and edited by A.E.Waite
IBIS Press ISBN: 0-89254-094-X US $14.95
A short but vital addition to the study of the Kabala. Knut Stenring claims to have uncovered secrets never before brought forth. Complete with charts and diagrams.
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