Tag Archives: witchcraft

Book News!

The Green City Witch

Weaving a Magical Life in Urban Spaces
By Lynn Shore

Available for Preorder Now

Published by Aeon Books | Launching October 2025
Paperback | 300 pages | ISBN: 9781801521888
Illustrations by Hannah MacDonald


About the Book

A beautifully illustrated handbook for urban witches that combines green witchcraft with city life.

Rich with herbal and esoteric wisdom, this delightful and thoughtful guide provides an essential basis for magical practitioners living in cities to connect with nature, magic and community.

This book is for urbanites who want nature and magic in their lives. Written by an experienced herbalist, who eats street weeds, talks to crows, casts spells, and brews potions; this book shows how to walk a magical path while riding the waves of urban life.

Divided into three sections, The Green City Witch covers the lifestyle, knowledge, and techniques of real witches who love nature and city life. The lifestyle section covers how to work sustainably, grow roots in new towns, align with the seasons, and forage; all within city limits. The urban nature section contains an extensive directory that details how to engage with fascinating lifeforms that thrive in city buildings, streets, and parks. From spider plants to knotweed, and parakeets to earthworms, the plant, animal, and bug lore entries offer magical symbolism, folklore, foraging or care advice, and practical ways to weave them into daily life. The techniques section explains how to achieve magical goals with rituals, sigils, spells and charms, blood magic, shapeshifting, and divination, all with local, natural, sustainable materials.

The Green City Witch is an invaluable resource for beginners and experienced magical practitioners alike, who wish to embrace the endless magical potential and gifts of urban nature.  


Preorder Offer – 20% Off!

Be among the first to get a copy of The Green City Witch by preordering now. From now until the official launch at the end of October, Aeon Books is offering a 20% discount on all preorders via their website.

🛒 UK / International (via Aeon Books):
👉 Preorder with 20% discount from Aeon Books
(Use discount code GCW20 at checkout)


Ordering Outside the UK

If you’re outside the UK, the book will also be available through major retailers and online bookstores closer to publication. You can bookmark or preorder through the following links:


Book Details

PublisherAeon Books
Publication DateOctober 2025
CoverPaperback
Pages400
Size152mm x 229mm
Catalogue No95368
ISBN-139781801521888

Launch Event

Official Book Launch: Saturday 25th October 2025
Black Moon Botanica – Amsterdam Store
Spiegelgracht 30-H
1017 JS, Amsterdam
The Netherlands
(18:30 – 20:00)

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About the author

Lynn Shore is a herbalist, educator, and green witch. Born in Bristol, study, and work led her to several UK towns and cities. In 2004 she settled in Amsterdam and founded Urban Herbology which connects city people with nature through walks and courses. She also runs a community herb orchard, where locals, plants, and wildlife grow together. Lynn and her family live in a plant and book-filled apartment. Most often out gardening, foraging, or concocting strange brews; helping others find peace in nature is her mission.

About the illustrator

Hannah McDonald is a British artist and author, living in Amsterdam. She explores visual narratives that create space for emotional exchange between audience, artwork and artist, to enhance a deeper connection to each other and the natural world. 


Hiding in Plain Sight

The Witch’s Art of Timing

There are times to be seen – and times to slip quietly through the cracks of the day. I’ve found both are acts of power.

As urban wild ones, green witches, hedge-walkers in sneakers, and jeans, we don’t always wear our magic on the outside. We move through city streets with herbs tucked into pockets, our intentions humming just below the surface. We know how to soften our steps at dusk, how to time our movements with shifting shadows. We hide in plain sight – not from fear, but from wisdom.

To blend in is not to disappear. It is to belong – in a way that doesn’t demand explanation.

Why We Hide (Sometimes)
There’s a deep relief in not having to explain yourself. To not be asked “what’s that smell?” when you’re anointing your wrists with a well-crafted Mugwort oil. To avoid the blank stares when you mention the fox you saw three nights in a row and how you took it as a sign.

In the quiet of blending, we protect our inner fire. We gather strength, we observe, and we listen.

Yet, there are moments – often sweet, crackling moments – when it becomes necessary to emerge; To let the world see the green streak in your spirit. These are the times to say aloud what you believe, what you sense, what you know. Not in any attempt to convert, but to show. These are the times when we say: “This is possible. This is me.”

In doing so, we make it possible for others to do the same.

The Power of Liminality
I’ve always been drawn to the in-between and perhaps you have too. To dawn, but especially dusk, to Beltane but particularly Samhain, and certain portals, doorways, and stairwells. These are places in time and space where things shift. Liminality is not just a metaphor – it’s a texture, a scent, and a softening of edges. It helps us become more fluid, less fixed. It lets us flow unnoticed when we choose – and it amplifies our presence when we step forward, radiant and rooted.

In my forthcoming book, I write about how the liminality – this altered state of awareness between waking and dreaming – is where we can work magic most naturally. In this zone, we perceive more, judge less, and flow easily with the energies of a place. The city becomes more than concrete and tarmac; it becomes a living, whispering terrain which can converse with us.

The Gift of Growing Older
As a woman of middle age, I’ve noticed myself blending in more. After the initial shock of this quieting, this invisibility, it’s become quite a blessing. The gaze that once interrupted my flow, now slides off easily. What remains is a spaciousness of quiet power. With it comes the freedom to observe, roam, and move like mist through the world – less noticed, more knowing. Blending in has become less of a tactic and more a rite of passage.

Preparing to Re-emerge
As I write this, I’m beginning to prepare for next year’s pilgrimage. (It looks like it’ll be late April to early May – Beltane. Naturally.) I do not see it only about physical travel, but also as a process of reconnecting with source.

This pilgrimage will take my group to the Rheinland – the area where Hildegard von Bingen lived, listened, and wrote with fierce clarity about the interconnection of all things. She saw humans as threaded into the cosmos, not separate from nature but woven into its divine intelligence. Her writings on plants, animals, stones, and healing still pulse with vitality, and I’m drawn to them like roots seeking water. The plan to walk the same ground, breathe the river-winds she described, and experience the same plants she once did, feels less a move forward than a turning back, and a chance to find what’s already inside.

As part of my preparation, I’ve begun learning German. A complete beginner, just a few minutes per day, I’m utterly enchanted by the strangeness of it. Why German? Because many of the texts calling to me – Hildegard’s own writings – I’ve read in English translation, but I prefer to consult original texts, and there are many modern resources available only in German. Hildegard’s originals are an intriguing weave of her own invented language (Lingua Ignota of around 1000 words), old German, and Latin. So by starting to learn German, I hope to understand a little more of what has long been hidden in plain sight from me. Just as I’ve learned to blend in as an urban witch, I now feel called to emerge differently – through language, with due reverence and curiosity.

Coming Out of the Broom Closet
Not for all of us, but for many there comes a time to confidently tell your neighbour why Bay and Tansy leaves are tucked into your doorframe. When you post your first dressed candle or mini-altar online. When you say, gently but firmly, “Yes, I do that kind of work.” That is when you cast a quiet spell of acceptance – on yourself, and on the world around you. Of course, not everyone needs to do this, and not everyone will understand. And sometimes, when we allow ourselves to be seen – openly, imperfectly – it’s not just for us. It’s for the one quietly watching, unsure if their way of working magic is real enough, valid enough. Seeing another speak openly about what they do -and what they don’t – can be a kind of reassurance, a quiet beacon. A reminder that they are not alone.

I like to think that in those moments, something primal and healing stirs in the great urban melting pot; Rippling outward, unstoppable.

I carry Rue in my pocket. I walk lightly at dusk, noticing how the city breathes. And, I slip through the shadows when I need to. But I also speak more freely now. I write more openly about what I do. I’m comfortable that my way of magic be witnessed, because it may just help someone else feel more comfortable in themself.

Dancing Presence and Absence
Blending in and standing out aren’t opposites – we all need a balance of both, because one helps the other to shine. Like the moon. Like the fox. Like something half-seen at the edge of the streetlight’s reach. We can all engage liminality: that threshold we carry within and sense without, the space and time where magic waits to be met.


I would love to know…
Do you prefer to blend in or stand out these days?
Which liminal times or spaces help your magical juices to flow?
Which quiet beacons have helped you to feel strong over the years?

P.S. I’ll be sharing more about the upcoming Hildegard pilgrimage soon, and snippets from the book as I go. If you’ve ever felt drawn to the liminal or wondered what it means to feel rooted wherever you go, you might find resonance here. More soon.

Spell for Midwinter Light

The winter solstice is when the sun’s path reaches its lowest point in the sky. This year that will happen on December the 21st. Around this time, we experience short days and long nights. It can be bleak and dismal but from now until midsummer, daylight hours will steadily increase. The ancient festival of Yuletide starts at the solstice and continues for two weeks. It honours the return of the Sun and is a chance to show gratitude to those who we value, those who support us, and those who need our support. This is also a time to consider the aspects of our lives that we would like to illuminate during the coming months. Here is a spell to help you do just that. Don’t over think the intention part, just let thoughts bubble up..

Gather the following materials:
Small handful of evergreen leaves, perhaps Ivy, Fir, or Holly, from plants growing nearby your home
Natural wax candle and lighter
Bay leaf, Birch bark, or paper (to write your intention on)
Pen or pencil.

Arrange the evergreen leaves in a circle around the candle. Light the candle and keep the leaves away from the flame. Take a moment to sit comfortably and centre yourself. Feel the warm glow of the candle and relax with a few deep breaths. Think of what you would like to come into being for you during the coming months; What would you like to bring to light, and breathe life into? Write a summary to capture the essence of this midwinter intention on the Bay leaf, Birch bark or paper.

Read your intention, aloud or inwardly. Then, place the leaf under the candle or herbs. Breathe smoothly, visualising the candlelight filling your body and illuminating your spirit. Imagine this energy pushing aside darkness and cobwebs; see it manifesting your wishes. Imagine the evergreen leaf circle growing upward, like a column around the candle. See it shooting up into the sky, entangled, glossy, and determined – a channel directing your intention up into the atmosphere to find all it needs to achieve your will. See your intention complete, as if it is already achieved, here and now.Enjoying this meditative state for a few minutes, then visualise the column of evergreen leaves reducing back to the ring around the candle. Breathe smoothly and become more aware of your surroundings and the floor beneath you. Extinguish the flame and take more time to ground yourself. Eat something to help with this if needed.

Leave the spell candle, intention note, and evergreen foliage undisturbed, if possible. Return to this set up each day during Yule, to relight the candle and repeat the practice. If you are unable to leave the candle and leaves out for the duration, store them safely, and bring them out to use each day. After fourteen days, burn your intention leaf or paper in the candle flame, then dispose of the cooled ashes in earth, either outside or in a house plant pot.