This was such a strange book. The premise is that the author learned witchcraft from her Brazilian mother and grandmother (uh huh) that was based on folk magic that was integrated with the more accepted Catholicism and it is NOT Wicca. Seriously, people. It's not. She means it. Maybe she meant that in the BTW sense? Because half the book was ritual after ritual that were typical generic 90's Wiccan rituals. There's no folk magic or fairy lore in this book. The author tries to touch on many different magical concepts but only does so in a passing manner. I can't speak to the accuracy of all the herbal correspondences given, but there were definitely some inaccuracies in other areas based on my 20+ years of learning. There's a lot of ranting against Christianity. I'm not saying I'm a fan, but I think it's better to stand on your own work than worry about what the others are preaching... unless that's the point of your book. Is it?
This was just all over the place. Some of the generic (Wiccan) mythology was pretty on point. But there were so many things that didn't make sense. For example, the author lights three candles at ritual: One for the Goddess, one for the God, and one for an androgynous deity. But she never addresses the androgynous deity. She says to select deity names to use for the God and Goddess, but never for the other one. Why include it then?
The author talks about how magic is not typically done at Sabbats, and then concludes EVERY Sabbat ritual with the instruction to leave any candles out that need to burn, for example, those lit for spellwork.
It's SO repetitive. Not only does she write out the circle casting and takedown TEN times (once for each Sabbat and once each for Full and New Moon Esbats), but even within the rituals, she says and does things two and three times. Merry Meet! Merry Part! And Merry Meet Again! Merry Meet! Merry Part! And Merry Meet Again! Why???
Seriously, read some of the other two-star reviews. They're more thorough and specific than mine. Now, to be fair, I've heard that the later volumes of Green Witchcraft are better than the first, so I may still check them out. But there's definitely better, more thorough books out there than this one.