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The Modern Pagan
The Modern Pagan
Oct 22, 2024 10:26 PM

Author:Brian Day

The Modern Pagan

Paganism means living in harmony with nature and respecting all that nature has to offer. It is a sustainable way of life that has existed in the British Isles for thousands of years and that has survived secretly among scattered households throughout the UK. Although it is not a religious path (true pagans do not worship deities), paganism will appeal to anyone who cares about the environment, who is interested in maintaining an organic lifestyle or who believes in respecting their roots whilst catering for the future. Paganism may be thousands of years old, but it is particularly suited to meeting our twenty-first century concerns.

In The Modern Pagan, Brian Day explains how to live in a way that honours the land and its inhabitants. There is advice on celebrating seasonal festivals, on cultivating a true pagan garden, on creating delicious food and drink from hedgerow fare, on herbal medicine, on the importance of pagan parenting and family values, on living in harmony without prejudice and discrimination and much more. The core principles of Modern Paganism will make sense to anyone who is tired of the hustle and bustle of our polluted lifestyles, and who is looking for a way to live that is in balance with our fellow human beings and the natural world.

Reviews

Both humble and generous, Karen Armstrong rescues Genesis from purely literary criticism by seeing it as a collection of rather baffling teaching stories, and argues forcefully that we have to struggle for the meanings embedded in the often mysterious text, much as Jacob wrestled all night with God in the shape of an angel.

—— Independent

Superb...a jewel of a study... The entire book is written with the same level of passion and insight...Ms Armstrong has taken a familiar biblical story and made it relevant to our deepest and darkest concerns...a little masterpiece worthy of being a long-treasured companion to the ancient classic she celebrates

—— Washington Post

Armstrong reveals much about this ostensibly familiar work

—— Christopher Hirst , Independent

Armstrong wants to restore the philosophical to the question of faith, and she does so in an approachable manner

—— Lesley McDowell , Herald

A remarkable memoir ... vivid, compassionaite and notably unsentimental

—— Times Literary Supplement

[An] affecting debut ... the nonagenarian gives voice to a childhood version of himself who witnesses his older sister's love for a Christian boy break down the invisible wall that kept Jewish families from Christians across the street. Yet when major world events touch the poverty-stricken block, the individual coming-of-age is intensified without being trivialized, and the conversational account takes on the heft of a historical novel with stirring success.

—— Publishers Weekly

A fascinating, poignant story ... which leaves one with a sense of hope

—— William Woodruff, author of The Road to Nab End

A superb story ... A delightful, fascinating read which held me spell-bound throughout.

—— Billy Hopkins, author of Our Kid

An enormously intellectually challenging book. A fascinating way of approaching the subject

—— Rabbi Julia Neuberger
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