Showing posts with label alchemy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label alchemy. Show all posts

The Alchemist's Kitchen Review

The Alchemist's Kitchen
Average Reviews:

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The Alchemist's Kitchen, by Susan Rich, published by White Pine Press ([...]).To say that this compilation is a lovely and simple collection would be false. "Simple" could be taken to mean childlike, or unsophisticated, which it most certainly isn't. By simple I mean that the poetry is understandable and personal, not so cluttered and overly nuanced that it becomes incapable of eliciting emotion.
Emotion abounds in this collection, which is divided into three parts: Incantation, Transformation and Song. Each section has its own beauty, and there is a delicate feel that at times becomes jagged and pointed, enough to make you sit up and re-read the stanza. This is not a poetry book to sit back and feel relaxed by, but rather one to slowly meditate upon.
The people drawn within it are complicated: in one moment trying to determine if a noise is simply thunder or an airstrike, while choosing what breakfast cereal to eat. They carefully choose a lipstick for a dance that may be their last. They discuss their travels with a dying parent whose only journey is from hospital bed to bath. They are painful and yet some are light and airy.
One of my favorites: from Song,
"You Might Consider"
how my long life of losing men
could create a new international sport.
Men lost in the desert, men missing
in action from doorways and all night diners;
men making the most of fire
escapes, service stairs, the emergency aisle
of airplanes like United. Men
para-sailing after spaceship encounters.
I am accomplished in the world
of the see-you-later save
as his pick up truck disappears
traveling on to the next espresso stand.
Something in the curve of my collar,
the cut of my blouse sets them running.
They know they are in the hands of a master.
But when the coffee's on, the pumpernickel
toasted just right, I have to let them know;
I'm actually ready to let them go." p.87
In "Transcendence", she uses the musical phrase,
"plastic curtains ecstatic as castanets." Words like that are mesmerizing, and I kept finding segments equally unique and beautiful, compiling an instant mental picture.In some of the poems she discusses the genocide in Srebrenica, and at times she refers to a 'Sarajevo Rose'. I had to look that up, and I've included a picture (above). A Sarajevo Rose is the location of a mortal shell attack that killed some one, some person, some individual that meant more than just a mark on the pavement. The damaged area is then filled with red wax, as a rememberance. That strange mix of memory and horror with a tiny dash of shocking color is what too many have lived through, and in a lyrical way Rich manages to link her poems with that same emotional impact.

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"Kaleidoscopic curiosity, powerfully kinesthetic language, and an encompassing compassion range in this abundant collection, in which personal and public realms serve as equal alembics for the distillation of both materia and light."—Jane Hirshfield

"Rich is a traveler and an observant one at that, with a keen attention to detail and a wonderful ear. These poems are a delight."—Library Journal


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The Alchemist's Kitchen: Extraordinary Potions & Curious Notions (Wooden Books) Review

The Alchemist's Kitchen: Extraordinary Potions and Curious Notions (Wooden Books)
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I couldn't praise this little book enough if I wrote another book about its virtues. The only problem with it that I have is that it is over too quick and the fact that this piece is meant to be little more than a coffee table book is to be taken into consideration, but due to the price and the quality of the information I feel confident in my choice to make a glowing review for this book. It is a brilliant summary of the lesser working as Plant Alchemy has been called. Yes there have been more complete introductions to practical Spagyria (Plant Alchemy) and there have been better books written on the theories of alchemy but this book has gems not found in any of the other books I've read on the subject. Need to collect Angel Water (morning dew, especially collected in Spring) for an operation such as distilling the Archeus of water? Turn to page 30 for instructions on how to produce a hygroscopic plant salt from oak bark. Want to know how to make charcoal for heating? Turn to page 52. This little book even has a skeletal description of the process of producing "Bhasmas", an Indian spagyric medicinal product which alchemically bridges the vegetable and mineral kingdoms! This book has all this and is beautifully illustrated to boot. An excellent notebook for beginners, informative and attractive.
These Books would be excellent primers for the aspiring Alchemist:
The Practical Handbook of Plant Alchemy: An Herbalist's Guide to Preparing Medicinal Essences, Tinctures, and Elixirs
Path of Alchemy: Energetic Healing & the World of Natural Magic (Pathways to Enlightenment)
Alchemists Handbook: (Manual for Practical Laboratory Alchemy

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Packed with everything from ancient recipes for glues, varnishes, and paints to spiritual preparations of herbal tinctures and oils, including magical formulae and practices of alchemy, The Alchemist's Kitchen will appeal to anyone fascinated by the past and by the occult world. Guy Ogilvy takes you inside medieval laboratories and kitchens, revealing the hows and whys of mythical recipes and concoctions.

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