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The 1861 book's five stories are Lois the Witch (124 pages), The Grey Woman (78 pages), The Doom of the Griffiths (52 pages), The Half-Brothers (20 pages), and The Crooked Branch (63 pages).
Her several books detail her experiences within witchcraft and her work through the craft. Available in PDF, ePub and Kindle. Lois is best known for her work as an author. Lois the witch is one of her short stories and a lovely way to easy into the authors way. Book digitized by Google from the library of Harvard University and uploaded to the Internet Archive by user tpb. Publication date 1861 Publisher B. Tauchnitz Collection americana Digitizing sponsor Google Book from the collections of Harvard University Language English. Her most notable, “Witch Amongst Us- the Autobiography of a Witch” (1979), is regarded for its ability to remain secretive in terms … Lois the Witch: And Other Tales by Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell.
Lois the Witch and Other Tales is an 1861 collection of five stories by Elizabeth Gaskell.The book was published by Bernhard Tauchnitz in Leipzig.. We start off with Lois being a girl who has lost her father and now has her mother being on her death bed. Elizabeth Gaskell’s “Lois the Witch” was first published in three serialized parts in October 1859 in the weekly All the Year Round, edited by Charles Dickens.It was eventually published in Gaskell’s collection of five stories, titled Lois the Witch and Other Tales, in 1861. Lois the Witch gives us a first-hand account of what the Salem witch craze was like, and if you don’t realise what the witch craze that swept across Europe in the 1600s were about, and how easy it was for people to get accused – not to mentioned executed – this puts everything into perspective.
The copy I received is an excellent production. Lois the Witch, by Elizabeth Gatskell, has long been forgotten in catalogues such as I sight (Australia) but it is a worthy classic. Free download of Lois the Witch by Elizabeth Gaskell. Background. When her mother informs her that as there is no one else in England that is related to her, she has sent a letter to her only relative who is currently living in America. In Lois the Witch, the “others” are anyone who does not belong to the elite Puritan society, including Lois, an Anglican, and Nattee, an Indian, who both are accused of witchcraft in the novella. Additionally, Rebecca Styler explains that Gaskell sees the root of evil as societies placing a barrier between themselves and the “other” (41). Lois Bourne who also went under the craft name Tanith, was an influential figure in the Neopagan religion of Wicca, having been involved in it from the early 1960s, and wrote a number of books on the subject. BUT, most valuable from an historian's (and even psychologist's) view, is the invaluable 'Foreword' by Jenny Uglow.