The illustrated herbiary Guidance and rituals from 36 bewitching botanicals

Maia Toll

Book - 2018

In this beautifully illustrated gift book featuring insightful profiles of 36 familiar herbs, fruits, and flowers, herbalist Maia Toll shows how interacting with plants can be a form of meditation. Tarot-inspired cards featuring smaller versions of the illustrations help guide personal reflections.

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Subjects
Published
North Adams, MA : Storey Publishing [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Maia Toll (author)
Other Authors
Kate (Illustrator) O'Hara (illustrator)
Physical Description
167 pages : color illustrations ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781612129686
  • Chickweed: start fresh
  • Daisy: be yourself
  • Red clover: center and ground
  • Sweet violet: inner sanctum
  • Apple: forbidden fruit
  • White sage: clear the way
  • Self-heal: ripple outward
  • Thyme: distill your self
  • Dandelion: perseverance
  • Burdock: tap your resources
  • Rose: crack open
  • Raspberry: create space
  • Hawthorn: heart's home
  • Plantain: rewild
  • Valerian: release rigidity
  • California poppy: resurrection
  • Mugwort: between dreams
  • Elderberry: cyclicality
  • Lady's mantle: fortitude
  • Starflower: find grace
  • Lavender: tough love
  • Comfrey: what needs mending?
  • Marshmallow: a spoonful of sugar
  • Yarrow: pocket of protection
  • Oats: just be
  • St. John's wort: light in the darkness
  • Trillium: spirit into matter
  • White willow: the ways of water
  • Quaking aspen: we are one
  • Mullein: integration
  • Reishi: defying gravity
  • Passionflower: exuberant quietude
  • Nettle: pay attention!
  • Tulsi: you are sacred
  • Vervain: let magic in
  • Rosemary: remember.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this delightful debut, wellness coach Toll relies on her imagination to spin a fun botanical mythology. Never aiming to share functional information about herbs (or even to document traditional magical uses), Toll jumps straight into "fanciful descriptions and symbolic flights of fancy" from her personal experiences and lively imagination to offer prompts for introspection into the natural world. Toll gives each plant a focusing sobriquet or guidance-thyme is "Distill Your Self," yarrow is "Pocket of Protection"-and then anthropomorphizes the (always female) sprout with a personality and lesson to teach, such as "know the microworld" and "move toward your truth." Each plant is associated with a solo ritual activity (most do not actually use plant material), reflective questions to guide self-exploration, and a quotation loosely related to a theme or story of folklore. O'Hara's bright, bold illustrations-which introduce each entry and are also included as a divination deck-will appeal to readers with strong lines and a sense of glowing from their centers, a boldness that carries through to the more representational sketches of plants that follow. However, the use of color and multiple fonts in the text can become overly busy. This will not replace more traditional herbal guides, but it will appeal to those looking for fun new ways of considering plants. (Aug.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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