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Werken van Catherine Maccoun

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Having read several self-help and personal-improvement books over the past few years, the recent trends are hard to ignore. Most of the books on the market covering these themes tend to simplify life changes and introspective reevaluation to the point of claiming it is as easy as saying ‘Yes I Can’. With the popularity of The Secret and guided imagery, even talking to yourself is taken out of the equation, and simply wishing or imagining personal improvements is supposed to be enough to bring about radical change.

So reading Catherine MacCoun’s book, On Becoming an Alchemist: A Guide for the Modern Magician, is a much needed breath of fresh air in what has always seemed a cliché and uninspired genre.

MacCoun’s title and subject matter may at first put some readers off with its references to arcane alchemical arts and magical properties. But what she has actually managed is to offer a fresh perspective into how people make choices, perceive the world around them, and live their lives. She does so by introducing us to an innovative blend of spiritualism and psychology, in much the same way that Alchemy itself blends scientific observation with objective mysticism.

Granted, chapters like the one that uses scenes and terminology from Harry Potter to illustrate a point may take the magician aspect of the book a tad too far for some people. But the message within is much more grounded in reality than some of the ‘guided imagery’ feel-good books cluttering the bookstore shelves these days.

The true test of any book of this nature is the ability of the reader to glean something constructive and useful from its pages, even if they do not buy into the author’s overall message. Readers of MacCoun’s latest will undoubtedly have no trouble walking away wiser and more aware, no matter their take on becoming a Modern Magician. And that, as they say, is magic.
… (meer)
 
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smichaelwilson | 13 andere besprekingen | Jan 5, 2017 |
Generally I liked this historical novel about a nun and a troubadour in 14th century England. It includes witchcraft, Oxford, and the plague. I found the rape scene off-putting.
 
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aulsmith | Feb 11, 2010 |
Deze bespreking is geschreven voor LibraryThing Vroege Recensenten.
Couldn't get into it. The worst of pretentious wicca mixed with pop self-help.
 
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archphoenix | 13 andere besprekingen | Dec 5, 2009 |
Deze bespreking is geschreven voor LibraryThing Vroege Recensenten.
*sigh*

I'd posted a review of this when I first received it, but then I gave the book away and removed it from my library, as this was prior to the 'Collections' capability.

Of course, my review went away, and now LT wants a review from me because I received this as an Early Review copy. I can't recall what I wrote in my first review, but I can recall enough to post the following review:

This book has nothing to do with alchemy. It has nothing to do with the evolution of science. This has nothing to do with modern practices. It has nothing to do with changing any material into any other material. The title is a lie. This is a poorly written self help book, which only embraces the work alchemy as an allusion to transformation. The book itself is filed with platitudes and poorly conceived pop culture references. In some ways this is like a web page that drops hundreds of terms at the bottom of the page in an attempt to get more search engine hits. I read this book because I promised to read it and review it, and then I gave it away to the first person who expressed any interest at all, and the shipping was on me.… (meer)
½
 
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laurion | 13 andere besprekingen | Oct 2, 2009 |

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Werken
3
Leden
158
Populariteit
#133,026
Waardering
½ 3.3
Besprekingen
15
ISBNs
11
Talen
1
Favoriet
1

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