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Lilith: her Masks - Rites and Manifestations (eBook)

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Lilith: her Masks - Rites and Manifestations
Lilith: her Masks - Rites and Manifestations eBook Cover, written by Daemon Barzai
Lilith: her Masks - Rites and Manifestations eBook Cover, written by Daemon Barzai
Author(s) Daemon Barzai
Publisher Black Tower Publishing
Publication date November 28, 2018
Media type eBook
Length 281 Pages
ASIN B07KYH3MN8

For other uses of the word Succubus, see Succubus (disambiguation).

For other uses of the word Lilith, see Lilith (disambiguation).


Lilith: her Masks - Rites and Manifestations is an eBook written by Daemon Barzai. It is a reference book with regards to various spiritual rituals connected with Lilith.


Overview

  • Title: Lilith: her Masks - Rites and Manifestations
  • Author: Daemon Barzai
  • Published By: Black Tower Publishing
  • Length: 281 Pages
  • Format: eBook
  • ASIN: B07KYH3MN8
  • Publishing Date: November 28, 2018


Plot Summary

The Mother of the Demons and the Black Concubine, the Infernal Whore and the Temptress Serpent, the Hag of the Night and the Mother of Abortions; a Goddess and a Demoness, all of these and more Lilith is. This book covers in a practical and modern way, different ways to work with her. From rites of Invocation and Evocation to Pathworkings and Rites of Astral Exploration. If you are a modern practitioner of the Left-Hand Path and are interested in working with the Female Current, I am sure this book could inspire you in your Personal Rituals with the Goddess. In this book, you will find unique material, rituals, and illustration of the Queen of the Night.


Book Review

The following review was originally published by Tera on her Blog, A Succubi's Tale on December 23, 2018


The work is a collection of various thoughts, myths, legends and other related considerations about Lilith over time. There are also various rituals described from different sources in passing. Some of the information presented is a bit rote, the words feel familiar, the sources and the ones expected to be.

There are other, more interesting and less considered sources which I found to be of interest however. The work tends t jump from one concept to the next with really nothing to connect things together or to provide some sort of narrative or commentary which I think would have added more to this work that what comes out in the end.

Three out of five pitchforks.

While the work does touch on a multitude of aspects of Lilith and related minutia, it feels a little odd here and there. It isn’t that the work is taken from Wikipedia, for it is not. It’s more that the author seemed to be in a rush to put notes to paper and then move onto the next item on the list and I think that is a disservice to the subject matter.


External Links