Witches are becoming more prominent on TikTok, forming a community known as WitchTok. This platform serves as a hub for young witches to share their practices, connect with others, and spread information about various forms of magic, from hoodoo to astrology.
The witch hunts of the 1600s targeted mostly women, often those who were older, widowed, or perceived as a burden. Katharina Kepler, the mother of astronomer Johannes Kepler, was accused of witchcraft in 1615. She was accused of causing harm through magic, but was eventually acquitted due to her son's influence.
Archaeologist Chris Gosden believes magic is fundamental to human culture because it represents a way of participating in and relating to the universe. He sees magic, science, and religion as interconnected strands of human culture, each offering different ways of understanding the world. Magic, in particular, allows for a sense of awe and connection beyond rational explanations.
Quan Barry's novel 'We Ride Upon Sticks' blends 1980s pop culture with witchcraft and feminism to explore themes of female empowerment and sisterhood. Set in 1989, it follows a girls' field hockey team in Danvers, Massachusetts, who use magic to transform their lives and gain strength, reflecting the broader feminist movement of the time.
Modern witches on TikTok engage in practices like bone divination and spellcraft to connect with their ancestors and solve modern problems. They also address cultural appropriation by discussing what practices are culturally acceptable and who has the right to perform certain types of magic, emphasizing respect for the origins and meanings of these practices.
It's Halloween, and time again to break out the witch costumes. Pull on a pointy black hat and a scraggly wig. Or for an alternative, how about we stop joking around about witches and give them some actual respect? I'm Anne Strangehamps. They've been hunted and silenced and burned at the stake, but witches are still practicing the craft. Thank the goddess. In this hour, we take you from the 17th century to the online witch communities of today, and
It's Generation Witch, onto the best of our knowledge. Keep listening. From WPR.
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Need to hire? You need Indeed. It's to the best of our knowledge. I'm Anne Strainchamps and with Halloween in the air, there's someone I think you should meet. My name's Honey Rose. I'm 23 years old. I'm a TikToker. I'm queer. I'm a witch. When I was just getting started learning properties of herbs, candles, synchronicities, understanding that a sign is important to you and to no one else.
That's something that really was important for me to learn in the beginning. For me, hawks are often a sign. Also, sometimes it's just a feeling. I work with my ancestors, and your body works with your ancestors. So my grandmother, who passed, we called her Bird. Her birthday is actually on Halloween, and every Halloween we go...
to the cemetery to visit her as a matriarch of our family and someone that raised me. I love her so much. And two birds flew right above us. And then we saw hawks. Right after that, a whirlpool of leaves encased us. As soon as it got past us, it fell away. You can't tell me that's not like a sign from my grandmother.
The fact that someone is coming to me and I can understand that clearly, I can send back messages and offerings and it will be received, that to me is power. Welcome to the next generation of witches.
They're young, they're magical, and as producer Angelo Bautista discovered, they're everywhere. If you haven't heard already, witches are cool now. They're all over the popular video app TikTok. It's kind of a hub for witches.
"Hello, my name's Honey, and I am a witch. So if you have some questions that you haven't been able to answer in your research, maybe I can help you out with them." Honey Rose has over 120,000 followers and goes by the username "ThatHoneyWitch." Although, as Honey explained to me: "I'm not a witch, I'm a practitioner. I say witch because it's easier for people to understand."
Can you describe your craft and what you do? I'm not a hexer, if that's the question. I'm not like out here putting people in the freezer. Honey is a practitioner of hoodoo, a spiritual practice born out of the African diaspora.
I look at hoodoo as a way to reconnect to my ancestors that were enslaved here in America.
Hoodoo is just one of the many varieties of magic you'll find on the witchy side of TikTok. Or as it's known, witch talk. You'll find Jewish witches, Christian witches. You'll find demonologists, just straight up occultists, astrologers, sea witches, green witches, mediums, people that work with the Norse gods, people that work with Egyptian gods, array of everything, honestly.
Would you consider witch talk to be kind of the new coven? Yeah, in a way, honestly. Because there are like mass rituals that some people do. There's spreading of information, calling out misinformation. Yeah, that's a very good way to look at it. A new coven. When practicing magic, the color of your candle...
It's really important. Each one of these colors has different properties that can benefit your practice and your energy. Let's get into them. On Witch Talk, you'll find jokes about summoning demons by accident, crystals that could ruin your life if you're not careful. There's livestream tarot readings, spell jar recipes, tutorials on candle magic. Green is associated with earthly possessions and materialism. It's useful for money magic.
Blue is for clarity, peace of mind. How do you know what's real or what's not? When you say what's real and what's not, it's really about who's done their research. But we're talking about magic here. Magic works with reality. I'm a scientist in real life. And I'm a witch in real life. For example, I do bone divination. I have bones that are ethically sourced, of course. Of course. And I...
But just like any experiment, you have to test it. I ask questions that I know the answer to. If it doesn't tell me the correct answer, I'm not going to do that reading. I have to fix my bones. One thing I find fascinating about witch talk is that you'll see witches using old magic to solve really modern day problems, like getting someone who's ignoring you to text you back. Is a witch a witch?
I know I said earlier I don't put people in the freezer, but someone had ghosted me and wasn't answering me and I was like, "You're going in the freezer." And like, that is that you're going in the freezer. What did you do? So, putting in the freezer, the basic tools, you can have like a piece of their hair or just their name, their birthday, a photo of them, something like that, in a jar in the freezer and you put some aluminum foil around it. Oh, literally in the freezer? Literally in the freezer.
It kind of blocks all light from like shining in. It puts a stop on their life. And did it work? It works. It did? It did work. What happened? They texted me the next day. They were like, I'm sorry. I'm like, because you were in the freezer. Witch talk does have its bad side. And I don't mean evil.
Witch talk, like many online spaces, is not immune to toxic behaviors, misinformation, trolls, and conflict. Witch talk drama you need to know! Everyone's favorite voodoo priest is at it again and this time his target is afro-spiritual! Y'all want to be petty witches and fight it out video after video? I don't. It's getting to the point that I can't figure out which is better, Facebook mom group drama or witch talk drama. What kind of drama? What dramas do the witches get into?
There was the debacle last year, I believe, about someone hexing the moon. So many people have been asking how they can help with the moon situation, witch or not. I am not magically inclined, so I had to look this up. But a hex is like a spell of negative energy and restraint. And the moon is a powerful entity for witches. Hexing the moon sounds like a big no-no.
People think it was like baby witches or new witches that threatened to hex the moon, but that's not what happened. A troll? Some random guy that was like, I wanted to see if I could stir something up. And he did. And we fell for it. And it was all over Twitter. It was everywhere. Honey assures me that it is impossible to hex the moon. So the moon is doing just fine. Just me.
I know what you're thinking. Hexing the moon sounds silly. But on Witch Talk, there's also a more serious, ongoing conversation amongst witches about what is and isn't culturally acceptable. Who is allowed to do what magic?
And that can get pretty loaded when it comes to issues of race, identity, and ancestry. I'm tired of sugarcoating it. Just stop using white sage. I don't care if you grow it yourself. I don't care if it was gifted to you by a Native American. I don't care. That doesn't matter. Claiming that the Romani invented the tarot and that it is close to us, this is not the advocacy that you think it is. I have a question for white witches and white spiritualists on TikTok. Why are our practices...
in your mouth. Why are you talking about chakras, karmas, and all the other when it's not yours? I've actually had people say I'm not going to listen to you, a person of color, on this issue. That was specifically on the term Black magic, I believe. Oh. As a Black practitioner, Black magic is a racist term. It demonizes African traditional religions and the people that follow them.
I was told, like, no, it's not racist. It's not demonizing. I've had people come on and say that African traditional religions are primitive. That's just, it's hard to hear. With witches becoming so mainstream, sometimes I'm on Witch Talk and I feel like I'm being sold a mystical aesthetic and I'm buying into a trend.
But for Honey, it's all part of keeping the craft going, which is supporting witches.
I can understand where you're coming from. I make the witchy aesthetic, literally. I make cauldrons and tarot card holders. But if witch talk wasn't trending, then I probably wouldn't be able to sell the cauldrons that I love to make. I wouldn't have gotten so good at my tarot readings. I wouldn't have so many people to practice on, you know?
My favorite type of reading to do is an ancestor reading, just to tell you what they want to tell you because some of y'all ancestors are so nice and they just want to talk to you and tell you how good you're doing. Like, it's so sweet. I don't know if any amount of tarot reading or divination can tell us what will become of this next generation of witches. But I do know that TikTok would be a lot more mundane and a lot less magical
without them. Angelo Bautista talking with Honey Rose, known online as That Honey Witch. So while today's witches congregate online, let's go back, way back, about 400 years, give or take, to Europe in the early 1600s. Not an especially safe or comfortable time to live. Religious wars were tearing up the countryside. Plagues stalked cities and towns.
There were crop failures, pestilence, famine. And just like today, when times get tough, people looked around for a scapegoat and they found one: witchcraft. The witch hunts of early modern Europe were the worst in history. Between 1580 and 1630, an estimated 50,000 people were burned at the stake, most of them women. So imagine: you're an older woman, a widow, in a small town.
You can't read or write, but you have a little garden, a cow, a few chickens. You make wine for your neighbors. You sell a few herbal medicines. But then one day, there's a knock at the door. One of your neighbors has denounced you as a witch. And now the local magistrate and the jailer, with his collection of thumbscrews, would like to see you. Herein I begin my account. I maintain that I am not a witch, never have been a witch,
I'm a relative to no witches. I've never before had even the smallest run-in with the law. Not for fighting, not for cursing, not for licentiousness, not for the pettiest theft. Yet attributed to me in this trial is the power to poison, to make lame, to pass through locked doors, to be the death of sheep, goats, cows, infants, and grapevines, even to cure at will. I can't even win at backgammon, as you know.
This is the beginning of Rivka Galchin's new novel, "Everyone Knows Your Mother is a Witch," and it's based on a true story of a real woman. Her name was Katharina Kepler. She lived in the small town of Leonberg, Germany, and on a nice May morning in 1615, she was accused of being a witch. She was put on trial, but unlike so many other women, Katharina Kepler was eventually acquitted because she had something unusual.
She had a famous son. You might have heard of him.
Katerina Kepler was the mother of Johannes Kepler, but I personally had started thinking of Johannes Kepler, the great mathematician and astronomer, as the son of Katerina Kepler. Can I just say, when I heard that you had written a novel about how the mother of Johannes Kepler, one of the key figures in the scientific revolution, was tried for witchcraft, I thought, this is such a brilliant premise for a novel, but it never occurred to me that it was actually true.
What was she actually accused of? The central accusation was that there was a woman in town, and the historical record seems to suggest that she was probably suffering from some sort of neurologic disease. My guess is neurosyphilis, not that I know. But she was convinced that she had been given a bitter drink by Katerina and that she'd been given a poison.
But then once the idea was out there in the town, it just kind of went everywhere. And so she was accused of passing through doors that were locked. She was accused of looking at a pig and making that pig lame. She was accused of making a cow sick.
And the evidence would be that she walked by that cow every day. And it just sort of opened up all the anxiety that different people in the town had about, frankly, all the terrible things that were happening to them. You know, babies dying, other people dying painful deaths and unexpected deaths, mysterious deaths, their livestock and their livelihood being affected. It somehow just opened this channel and they found like a place to send all these anxieties.
So I completely get being just fascinated by the story and the history and wanting to dig into it. But what made you want to then go from doing the research to actually writing a novel, bringing Katerina herself to life? There was something, you know, and it's hard to describe. It feels kind of mystical, but there was something about this story.
woman or story that for me, it transmitted across time and space. I felt very close to her, even though that's a fantasy. And I don't know, it seemed like a voice I was interested in. And there are these kind of remarkable moments when you read the trial. And one thing that's wonderful about Katerina having had this famous son and Germany being in love with keeping very accurate records is the records of the trial are available. Did she say much?
The way the trial works is there was women in this area would be asked to publicly display how much they regretted the harm they had caused. And if they cried in public or showed the judges that they felt remorse, their sentence would be mitigated or pity would be shown to them. But of course, it's a bind. So they're sort of asking her to cry. And there's also the record of her simply saying, no.
I've cried so many tears in my life, I just don't have any left. So she wouldn't cry? She wouldn't cry. I almost feel like there's like a ray of incurable sincerity there. Under that much duress, I would fake anything that I needed to. I would have cried. I mean, if it means they're, you know, not going to actually, what was at stake? What would they have done? It's genuinely so...
It's grotesque and horrifying that you almost run the risk of that sort of pornography of suffering and misery. And it really was terrible. It was, they were burned or they were sort of had like gunpowder put on their necks so that they would be exploded. They were put on racks. They were stretched. They did have thumb screws. And they themselves, I mean, this I also think is part of
The invasion, it was quite common for women to go to an expert to find out if maybe they were a witch and just didn't know about it. Really? And that also, I think, is like a quite amazing form of violence into one's own kind of belief about oneself. Yeah. All the people who are accusing her are people who know her, who have seen her every day for years and years in this small town. Right.
And they know the horrific things that could happen to her. And yet there's a kind of, I don't know, they seem almost blithe about it. It's just the intimacy of the cruelty that's so chilling. Absolutely. It's almost like those photos of people who were working at the concentration camps, you know, running the gas chambers, these sorts of things. And then the photos that they took on the weekends of their picnics and stuff.
Yeah, exactly. I found myself halfway through the book thinking about Hannah Arendt writing about the mundanity of evil, the banality of evil, just how ordinary it can look. I often sort of feel like, you know, a monster would be kind of interesting to battle, but a sort of diffuse indifference mixed with stupidity, mixed with pettiness, mixed with genuine fearfulness is so much more terrifying.
You could be describing today also. Yeah. So I want to think a little bit about witches and women. Why did people accuse women of being witches? I know it's a huge question. I know there's not just, you know, one reason, but you must have thought about that yourself. Absolutely. And I did think that it is specifically something we do...
to the group that retains power despite it being their job to be powerless. So I sort of feel like there are different kinds of witches. There are the young witches. And what do they have? They have
they're attractive right and that's like a kind of power you can't sort of take it away from them I guess you can cover them up or sort of give them a lot of rules about how they can dress and what they can do but it's power and I sort of can see how it's frightening to other people to see that group of people have this power so I thought well that one sort of makes sense and then
A lot of the cases with the older women, which is more what was happening in Germany, these were people that were perceived as a burden. And so I think with Katerina was like a mix of so many things. She was an old woman and therefore sort of a burden. And at the same time, she was just mysteriously powerful. Her children had done so well. And I think that that was threatening.
Do you either have people in your life who are witches or have you ever practiced or thought about practicing yourself? I wish I could say I had, but no. I'm sort of still in a kind of like nerdy, science-y, strange, down-to-earth kind of crowd.
Maybe you should, you know, try. I know. At the very least, you know, sprinkle some salt in corners just to like clear the air. Exactly. Do some basic house magic. I love superstition because I feel like it's almost like a form of anxiety management. It's like a great form of relating to the possible. Yeah, I guess also almost all witchcraft that I've ever heard of
It is very earth-based. All the rituals are about connecting with the natural world. And so I'm thinking back to this period of time and the irony of its being Johannes Kepler's mother who's accused of being a witch and the beginning of the scientific revolution when a whole new level of rational abstraction was being birthed.
which would lead to things like the Industrial Revolution and our continuing march away from being part of the natural world. I know that's so interesting. And also something that I hadn't really had a strong sense of before was the way that it's a funny moment in time because it actually is the peasants and the women who have developed, mostly through an oral tradition, a tremendous and much of it very accurate knowledge about...
herbs and plants and treatments and the medicine. I mean, not that it was perfect, just as it's still not perfect, but just that it was like an experiential evidence-based therapy.
kind of research project that had been going on for hundreds and hundreds, if not thousands of years. It was actually not an exclusively feminine project, but a particularly feminine project. And then there is this like weird transition where they're quote unquote casting out superstitious beliefs, but also weirdly casting shade on what was actually a foundational knowledge that wasn't
So it's just like a funny lighting. But it's also a period of time when medicine, what we think of as modern medicine, is just starting up and men are taking it over. And so there's also this kind of gendered, who are the healers thing going on. And especially you sort of see, like you can see men who were trying to make their living as a doctor and who found these alternative, basically cheaper practitioners, women, who
Right. And so it was as if they had to be discarded completely and had to have all this shade cast on them. It's so interesting to me that after all these centuries, just the word witch still has so much power. Yeah, no, it is. It is shocking. And everyone's trying to use that power because it summarizes something for people. Well, thank you so much for bringing Katharina back to life. Okay. Thank you so much for your time and your attention and your thoughts.
Rivka Gulchin. Her new novel is called Everyone Knows Your Mother is a Witch. I'm coming up with the planet in crisis and global warming threatening everyone and everything. Could magic and witchcraft perhaps offer some hope for the future? We'll find out next. On to the best of our knowledge from Wisconsin Public Radio and PRX.
Every generation has its witches, just like every culture has its own magical beliefs and practices. So why do we persist in regarding them as part of the loony fringe, when in fact something like 75% of the adult population of the Western world holds some belief in magic or the paranormal? So what if, instead of dismissing it as make-believe, we treated magic as a legitimate way of knowing and relating to the world?
Archaeologist Chris Gosden has just written a global history of magic, from the Ice Age to the Internet, and he told Steve Paulson he's come to believe our own culture would be healthier and happier if we took magic a lot more seriously.
So I worked in Papua New Guinea for a long time, where everyone believes in magic. They don't have any doubt that the landscape is full of spirits, that the dead are all around them, that the world is broadly animate. There was an instance which I mention in the book where I went with a group of people and they said there was a series of stones on the ground that
And under certain circumstances, they felt those stones could fly around just above the ground. And if you knew how to read the movements of the stones, then it would tell you the future. And I never got to see the stones move, but I was always dead keen to do so. So part of many people's common sense in the world was a notion of magic.
So what did you make of that experience when people told you this? Were you sort of the skeptical Western scientist or did you immerse yourself in that world? That's a very good question. I was ambiguous, I think. So on the one hand, I had no doubt at all that my friends were intelligent, sensible people and that they thought this happened.
Can I quite bring myself to believe it happens? I'm not so sure. So I'm in this weird state as to, you know, does it or doesn't it? And I think maybe, you know, I've never particularly seen a ghost, but I don't disbelieve in ghosts, as it were.
So one of the things I'm doing at the moment is experimenting with a greater belief in magic to see where it takes me. But I'm still constrained by my rational background.
So you talk about what you call the triple helix of human culture, religion, science, and magic, which I found so interesting because there is a common narrative about human history that first we had magic for many thousands of years, then religion, and then finally science came along as the one credible way to understand the world. And magic essentially is written off as a kind of pre-modern antiquated worldview. You don't believe that at all, do you?
I don't. No, no, no, no. I'm quite opposed to that view. So I think all these three strands, magic, religion and science are important. A belief in magic doesn't make you irrational, doesn't make you anti-science. So for me, magic is about a participation in the universe, a sort of openness to the possibility of a great range of cause and effects.
You know, the stones moving, as it were, not all of which can be explained by science. Aren't these three ways of knowing, magic, religion, and science, all making claims on what is real, what is true? And to some degrees, aren't they competing claims about what's real?
Yes, they definitely have been set up in those ways. The battles between religion and science are well known. Science and magic are well known. But for me, I think that's a wrong way of looking at things.
So I think the more we can be accepting of all three of them, clear thinking, logical approaches to the world, and then rather more intuitive ways, and then a sense of awe and something beyond us. And I think it's only once you get all three of those that we're allowing ourselves to be fully human. So if magic is so fundamental to what it means to be human, then
Why has it gotten such a bad reputation, in the modern world at least? There's this phrase, magical thinking, which is usually not a compliment. It usually means, you know, oh, it's sort of like you're going into woo-woo land. Yeah, yeah, exactly, exactly. I think it's a fairly concerted attempt in the 18th and particularly 19th century and continuing on into the 21st century, it must be said, on the part often of scientists,
to poo-poo any belief system that doesn't appear to be scientific. So it goes back partly to people like Max Weber, the sociologist, who said in order to be modern, we needed to be rational. We needed to think our way through mass society, mass living.
But he also worried about this. I mean, he talked about how society had become disenchanted, that we had lost something with, you know, the disappearance of this more magical way of thinking. Yeah, no, no, that's absolutely. But he was deeply ambiguous. I mean, I think he saw disenchantment as a necessary part of becoming modern.
But then also, as you say, there was loss there. He said something along the lines of we're becoming technicians without heart and specialists without soul. Yeah. Let's talk about one form of magic that has been especially controversial over the ages, and that's witchcraft. Is witchcraft practiced around the world? I'm assuming it comes in different forms depending on where you're talking about.
Yeah, I would guess there isn't a culture of the world that doesn't practice witchcraft in some ways. And of course, the Western world, there are lots of people who would now claim to be witches. I mean, modern day paganisms and Wiccan beliefs and those sorts of things, again, are very various, so it's hard to sum up, but it's often about summoning the powers of the earth, the regenerative powers, the
of growth and health. But then again, there's malign forms of witchcraft. So the bit of New Guinea I worked in, there were sorcerers and there was a very scary man who was seen as a sorcerer and I was quite scared of him. And he definitely, I mean, who knows whether he was a sorcerer or not? Nobody there had any doubt, but he played on that fact and he died in,
and then came back to life. They were about to bury him, and then he sat up. And that really cemented his reputation as a sorcerer, a man who'd cheated death. I bet it would. And that made me even more scared of him. What about the modern Wiccan movement? Does that draw on this history that we've been talking about, or is that kind of its own thing? A bit of both.
So in Britain, people will talk about druid beliefs and so on, which are in any case extraordinarily poorly known, but people feel like they're going back to Iron Age ways of doing things. But then there are other people who are much more modern, you know, the TikTok witches and all those sorts of things. So, I mean, I think that's the fascinating thing about magic. It doesn't just sit there as a sort of old...
old bit of belief that somehow survived into the modern world. People are always inventing it and reinventing it. Or the apps for astrology and younger people I know consult their astrology apps. And in a really interesting, slightly tongue-in-cheek, but they keep doing it. They get out the tarot cards. I mean, I think there's all sorts of ways in which people are playing, really. Does this work? Yeah. Should I bother with it?
Kind of, you know, bringing in a new piece of information to weigh alongside all the other stuff that you look at. Yes, and I think now in the 21st century, people are slightly dubious about the claims that rationality makes to being the only way of understanding the universe. And also a pretty deep sense that we may not as a globe understand
be going in anything like the right direction, that extracting material from the world continuously is not a good idea. And maybe we do need a more sort of kinly, caring, broader notion of our relationship with the world around us. Steve was talking with Chris Gosden. He's a professor of European archaeology at the University of Oxford and author of the book Magic, A History.
Bone Courage Potion #2 1 cup Bourbon 1/3 cup Sweet Vermouth Many shakes from the bottle of bitters The Pewter Bear knick-knack from the living room end table Mix everything in a mason jar then chill overnight outside on the windowsill in the waxing light of the moon. Steep a small bear figurine in the potion to infuse it with the courage of the bear.
As we learned in world history, the word "Berserk" probably derives from bear shirt, a garment made from the skin of a bear that Viking warriors donned in order to give them inhuman strength in battle. Bear of night, walk the earth. Fill my lungs with your breath. Give me courage, give me strength. Live in me, bear of night. Oh, and don't forget to refill Dad's Jim Bean with water.
Quan Barry takes us deep into a coven of field hockey playing Janet Jackson listening teenage witches circa 1989. Next, I'm Anne Strange Champs, and this is To the Best of Our Knowledge from Wisconsin Public Radio and PRX.
If there was ever a good time and place to be a witch, it was America in the late 1980s. Big hair, baggy, acid-washed denim. Pat Benatar, Madonna, and Stevie Nicks told girls to express themselves. Feminists reclaimed the mother goddess. Neopagans revived earth magic. And women everywhere started covens.
Among them, the girls' field hockey team at Danvers High School in Massachusetts. At least that's how Kwan Berry imagines it. In her recent novel, We Ride Upon Sticks, Shannon Henry Kleiber caught up with her. I wanted to start with setting the scene in We Ride Upon Sticks. It's 1989 in Danvers, Massachusetts, the site of the Salem Witch Trials, 300 years later. So who are the Danvers Falcons?
So the Danvers Falcons, they're the varsity women's field hockey team. And they begin the 1989 season as a definite rags to riches sort of story. I think our generation, we need shampoo and conditioner. Emilio Estevez, young guns.
The book begins, they're at a summer camp up in New Hampshire, Camp Wildcat, and they're basically the bottom of the bottom. The very first scene, we see them losing a scrimmage, you know, eight or nine to nothing. Nobody's even quite sure of the score because there's so many goals that have been scored against them. So they're really pretty demoralized, you know, it's kind of been the story of their lives, that they're the sort of the worst team in the New England conference, right?
But then, you know, because they've hit their bottom, their goalie decides to take matters into her own hands and to look for alternative ways of winning. I played field hockey on an all-girls team in the late 80s in Maryland. I had the mouth guard, the shin guards, the kilt. Yeah, it just all brought so many memories back to me.
I loved the pop culture references that you used. Benetton, Esprit, Swatch, Pat Benatar. Did you live through this too? I mean, it seemed like you knew so much. Yes.
Yes, the book is definitely in that sense fairly autobiographical. I did indeed grow up in the town of Danvers on the North Shore of Boston. As you mentioned, Danvers is where the young women, the girls, first began the accusations that led to the Salem mistrials. Back in 1692, Danvers was actually known as Salem Village.
So I always knew that aspect of things when I was growing up. And then because I did come of age in the 1980s, which in many ways are just ridiculous, you know, when you go back and you think about just the hair, the bands, the music, the clothes, you know, all of that stuff. There's just a level of just, again, just fun and camp is just present in that. Leave her alone. You're going to make me? Let's end this right now. You don't talk to her. You don't look at her.
You don't even think about her. You understand me? So what's the book with Emilio Estevez on the cover and why him? So Emilio Estevez, I knew that I wanted to have, you know, an 80s heartthrob be the person who was on the cover in which they make this pledge to the powers of darkness. It's a very generic powers of darkness. You know, we never get any specific names like the devil or Beelzebub or anything like that.
And he's kind of their spell book, right? I mean, this is their equivalent of a coven's book of spells. Yeah, the book of spells, book of shadows, sometimes they're referred to. So book of shadows is where you keep your spells and all those kinds of things. I also think it's kind of funny because when I think of Emilio Estevez, he seems to have like these chipmunk cheeks and he just, he's all American, you know, in many kinds of ways. And yet here he is being, you know, invoked as this power of darkness.
Your songs throughout the book, the 80s songs, it was like there was a soundtrack playing as I was reading it, which is so fun. Yeah. Was it like that writing it? Did you just keep hearing these songs in your head and then you wove them into the book?
It helps with the narrative at various times. Towards the end, for example, we get Cinderella pops up and there's a couple lines from a Cinderella song or Halloween. You know, we get Monster Mash, which is not particularly 80s, but it helps with the Halloween vibe. I'm not saying that they're a shortcut, but they allow you really quickly to establish a mood. Do you think of this as a feminist book? I do. Yeah, I really do.
Witchcraft to me has always been a feminist issue. It's the idea that women through the ages, historically, who were accused of being witches were women who didn't fit into society for whatever reason. Either they were too old or they didn't have children or they were too powerful. For example, one of the first women who was hung as part of the Salem witch trials is this woman, Bridget Bishop.
And she had been accused before somehow the charges were dropped. And the main accusations, one of the reasons why people think she was singled out is because she wasn't married. She was a tavern owner. She was quite successful. And it's also said that allegedly she liked to wear red.
And so when you think about that, you know, those reasons as to why perhaps she was chosen and why these girls accused her, witchcraft has always been seen as women who were on the margins for whatever reason. But I think that particularly, you know, in the 20th century, as you get Wiccans coming back into the scene, obviously there's always been Wiccans, there's always been pagans, but it has been about women reclaiming various spheres of power, right?
And so I do think that this book is very much a feminist book. And I was very much thinking about women and their voices and empowerment and all those kinds of things. Definitely. And their friendship, too. Their sisterhood. Can you read to me one of the potions? I'm looking at the Irresistible Potion on page 189.
So there's a character named Boy Corey. It's true that although field hockey is primarily a girl sport, occasionally there are boys who play it. And so Boy Corey is playing. He's the only boy on the field hockey team. And he is experimenting with different kinds of spells and seeing what kinds of
effects they have. And he's also keeping a diary, which each of the players does. They keep an individual diary and then those diaries are collected each week and they're stapled into Emilio. And you're supposed to be keeping a diary of all the dark, sinister things you're doing and that that dark, sinister energy is essentially what's fueling Emilio and giving the team their power. And so this is Boy Corey's entry. Monday, first week of November.
Greetings and salutations, as I am quite sure you are well aware. Ever since Halloween, the ladies and I are now in the business of casting spells and brewing potions. World, wish me luck. Irresistible potion number one. Half cup water. A dollop of honey, the ultimate attractor. One pinch of sugar. Cinnamon for taste. One of my baby teeth for mom's keepsake boxes. A mirror from a makeup compact.
Put everything in a pot and bring to a boil. When cool, transfer to a mason jar. Each night before bed, light a candle and visualize what you want. Fill a thimble with Irresistible Potion #1 and down the hatch. Obviously before drinking, strain out the mirror and the tooth, which are only intended because A once I sink my teeth into the intended, may I never be forgotten.
Have you always loved Halloween? What's your relationship to it?
So it's true that the last couple of years I've worn the same costume every year. It's a costume that I created called the Quan. People who don't know, Dr. Seuss actually invented his own alphabet. And one of the letters that he invented is called the Quan. It kind of looks like a Q, but it's very Dr. Seuss Q, so it's a Q that's not a traditional-looking Q. And so every year I dress up as the Quan. As a kid from a family that didn't get a lot of candy, because my mom did not roll like that, Halloween was a big deal to us.
For example, my mother didn't let us trick-or-treat off the street. Our street wasn't that big. My mother thought, "It's a fine amount of candy. You don't need to go to thousands of streets and come back with these pillowcases." She always thought that was terrible, so we could only, you know, trick-or-treat on our street. After I graduated from college, I lived at home for a year before I went to graduate school. I saw Halloween in Salem.
Halloween in Salem now is very different. It's very family friendly. They figured out a way to really monopolize and capitalize and make money. They call it Halloween season. It basically is the entire month of October. Oh. But it used to be when I saw Halloween in Salem on Halloween night, it's very similar to what happens in the book. There were actually protesters out holding signs saying, you know, three, John 316, you know, and saying things about suffer not a witch to live.
And the Wiccans and the Pagans were actually marching in Salem. And it was a celebration, a memorial to the people who had died. And yet there were still protesters, not tons of them, but people like yelling and screaming and things like that. So yes, I've always had a soft spot for Halloween. Now I think about it, it's the idea of transformation, the idea of mask wearing and just...
In some ways, some people become more themselves when they have a costume on, you know? It allows them, I don't know, for whatever reason, to let something inside go. And so I am interested in that, yeah. She's a girl that I was madly in love with when we were freshmen. Life's like a movie, write your own ending. Do you think there's a little witch in all of us? I hope so, you know, because like I said, to me it's about the idea of
having dreams of figuring out how to make them come true, right? So we're all kind of magicians in certain kinds of ways. You know, and so the whole family, we went to see the Muppet movie. And I still remember at the end, you know, when Kermit sings, life's like a movie, write your own ending. In some ways, there's something kind of witchy about that. Life's like a movie, write your own ending. So it's the idea that, you know, that we are magicians creating our own realities. And in many ways, that's what I see witchcraft is doing. F-W-E-I-J
Novelist Kwan Barry talking with producer Shannon Henry Kleiber about her recent novel, We Ride Upon Sticks. And here's hoping you put some witchcraft in your own life soon. And not just at Halloween. We all deserve a bit of magic every day.
To the best of our knowledge comes to you from our little audio coven in Madison, Wisconsin. Shannon Henry Kleiber was head witch this week. Angelo Batista and Charles Monroe Cain stirred the cauldron. Mark Rickers provided digital dark arts. And Joe Hartke cast a web of sonic sorcery. Our executive wizard is Steve Paulson. And I am your witchy host, Anne Strangeamps. Be well and join us again next time. PR.