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The Red-Haired Girl from the Bog: The Landscape of Celtic Myth and Spirit (2003)

di Patricia Monaghan

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1842147,600 (4.18)1
This exciting project brings together decades of study about mythology with one seeker's circuambulation through the landscape of Ireland, all described with a poet's voice. Pat Monaghan has studied and taught many integrated studies in poetry, science, mythology, feminist spirituality, environmental studies, chaos theory, and religion. All of these disciplines inform her writing, but none distract from the poetic story-telling or the mystical lore she encounters and then conveys. Her journey takes her to a churchyard with a fountain representing St. Bridget, perhaps a Christian representation of the Celtic goddess of water, fire, and transformation, called Brigit. Monaghan describes spiral petroglyphs and ancient sacred caves, bogs and woods where fairies have played their tricks on humans, and water falls that became sacred spots. The stories instruct and teach, as Monaghan points to ways that these myths still reveal the truths of human life, and the contradictionsof love and hate, mother and seductress, harmony and struggle that are embodied in women's lives -- in all of human existence.… (altro)
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A travelogue, covering decades, of a woman traveling to the land of her ancestors to help discover what makes her who she is. There is a lot of new age woo-woo stuff, but I like that if I find it believable. In this case I did. Perhaps because she really seems to know her Irish myths and legends, and those, along with some history, are interspersed with her experiences. Well written. I liked it quite a bit, even if the red-haired girl of the title was not a bog body but rather a fairy who would lure unsuspecting men out to her house: ruins in the midst of a bog. Naturally, the men were never seen again. ( )
  PirateJenny | Dec 29, 2005 |
This is a book for fans of Ireland, the Goddess, Pagans, Christians, and mythology. I highly recommend it.

A US author of Irish descent, Patricia tells of visits to Ireland over the years. She writes about searching for locations from Irish myth, such as entering faeryland and visiting the source of the Shannon looking for the salmon of wisdom. She also describes visiting different sacred sites at auspicious times, such as: lighting the Beltaine fires at Uisneach, the Mountains of the Cailleach and the Paps of Anu on different Lughnasadhs, Morrigan's cave on Samhain, Newgrange for winter solstice, and County Kildare for Imbolc.

She explores Irish culture and politics, always coming back the the land and the people. Her description of re-lighting the Sacred Flame of Brigit at Kildare gives me chills every time I read it. Patricia says this book came out of requests from friends for travel recommendations in Ireland. It has certainly made me want to take the trip even more.

(This review also appears at Amazon.com). ( )
  chavala | Oct 20, 2005 |
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This exciting project brings together decades of study about mythology with one seeker's circuambulation through the landscape of Ireland, all described with a poet's voice. Pat Monaghan has studied and taught many integrated studies in poetry, science, mythology, feminist spirituality, environmental studies, chaos theory, and religion. All of these disciplines inform her writing, but none distract from the poetic story-telling or the mystical lore she encounters and then conveys. Her journey takes her to a churchyard with a fountain representing St. Bridget, perhaps a Christian representation of the Celtic goddess of water, fire, and transformation, called Brigit. Monaghan describes spiral petroglyphs and ancient sacred caves, bogs and woods where fairies have played their tricks on humans, and water falls that became sacred spots. The stories instruct and teach, as Monaghan points to ways that these myths still reveal the truths of human life, and the contradictionsof love and hate, mother and seductress, harmony and struggle that are embodied in women's lives -- in all of human existence.

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