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Occult America: White House Seances, Ouija Circles, Masons, and the Secret Mysti

Description: Occult America by Mitch Horowitz Originally published in hardcover in 2009. FORMAT Paperback LANGUAGE English CONDITION Brand New Publisher Description From its earliest days, America served as an arena for the revolutions in alternative spirituality that eventually swept the globe. Esoteric philosophies and personas—from Freemasonry to Spiritualism, from Madame H. P. Blavatsky to Edgar Cayce—dramatically altered the nations culture, politics, and religion. Yet the mystical roots of our identity are often ignored or overlooked. Opening a new window on the past, Occult America presents a dramatic, pioneering study of the esoteric undercurrents of our history and their profound impact across modern life. Author Biography Mitch Horowitz is the editor in chief of Tarcher/Penguin. He has written for Esopus, Parabola, Fortean Times, and Science of Mind. A well-known voice for occult and esoteric ideas, Horowitz lives in New York City with his wife and two children. Review "What a fascinating book. So it happens that another equally compelling take on our complicated national narrative lies just beneath the surface of things; not the grand procession of presidents, generals, and wars, but something more hidden, more mysterious, but often no less revealing."—Ken Burns"Invisible and mysterious forces have shaped and guided the destiny of individuals and nations throughout history. From Moses to Gandhi, Jesus to Muhammad, Lincoln to Obama, hidden dimensions, in both our personal and collective consciousness, were conceiving, constructing, and shaping the course of civilization. In his precise and often detailed history of mysticism in America, Mitch Horowitz, has, in a way, tracked the evolution of our consciousness over 300 years."—Deepak Chopra "A sparkling, down-to-earth and often deeply touching account of a powerful, much misunderstood force in the formation of Americas cultural and spiritual identity."—Jacob Needleman, author of The American Soul and The New Religions.""Occult America is a truly remarkable achievement. Exhaustively researched, it takes the reader from the early concepts of the supernatural, personified by Mother Ann Lee, Joseph Smith, and Madame Blavatsky, through such modern-day figures as Henry A. Wallace and Norman Vincent Peale. It opens the eyes of the relatively uninitiated, in which I include myself, to the effect the occult has had, is having, and will have on the American experience."—John S.D. Eisenhower, author of The Bitter Woods: The Battle of the Bulge and So Far From God: The U.S. War with Mexico, 1846-1848"Religious people tend to be afraid of the word occult. Horowitz examines this aspect of life and religion in penetrating ways . . . and revealing its not unsubstantial influence on mainline Christianity. Truth seekers have always come from the edges. Religion itself should be glad they do."—John Shelby Spong, author of Jesus for the Non-Religious"This book is a delightfully original tour through American history, as seen through the lives of men and women devoted to all manner of mysticism. Across these pages troop spiritualists, prophets, seers, psychics, numerologists, transcendentalists, theosophists, and historical figures from Mary Todd Lincoln to Marcus Garvey to Henry Wallace. Their stories are part of the deep-seated American tradition of searching for the new—a tradition that Occult America both explains and enriches."—Stephen Kinzer, author of Overthrow: Americas Century of Regime Change from Hawaii to Iraq and All the Shahs Men: An American Coup and the Roots of Middle East Terror "Occult America treats esoteric ideas and movements with an even-handed intellectual studiousness that is too often lost in todays raised-voice discussions about religion and belief systems."—Washington Post Express "One of the most readable histories of American mysticism ever written. . . . This is historical reporting that is crafted so well, it holds the reader much like a Voodoo spell."—Tucson Citizen "Horowitz teases out fascinating stories of the dreamers and planners who flourished along the Psychic Highway . . . in showing how the paths of these figures occasionally intersected with the likes of Abraham Lincoln, Frederick Douglass and Franklin D. Roosevelt, Horowitz argues that the influence of the occult extends beyond the séance room and into the mainstream of American thought."—Washington Post Book World"A brilliant job of tracking down how positive thinker Norman Vincent Peale borrowed his core self-help philosophy from a religious movement called New Thought." —Washington Times Review Quote "What a fascinating book. So it happens that another equally compelling take on our complicated national narrative lies just beneath the surface of things; not the grand procession of presidents, generals, and wars, but something more hidden, more mysterious, but often no less revealing."-Ken Burns "Invisible and mysterious forces have shaped and guided the destiny of individuals and nations throughout history. From Moses to Gandhi, Jesus to Muhammad, Lincoln to Obama, hidden dimensions, in both our personal and collective consciousness, were conceiving, constructing, and shaping the course of civilization. In his precise and often detailed history of mysticism in America, Mitch Horowitz, has, in a way, tracked the evolution of our consciousness over 300 years." -Deepak Chopra "A sparkling, down-to-earth and often deeply touching account of a powerful, much misunderstood force in the formation of Americas cultural and spiritual identity." -Jacob Needleman, author of The American Soul and The New Religions ." " Occult America is a truly remarkable achievement. Exhaustively researched, it takes the reader from the early concepts of the supernatural, personified by Mother Ann Lee, Joseph Smith, and Madame Blavatsky, through such modern-day figures as Henry A. Wallace and Norman Vincent Peale. It opens the eyes of the relatively uninitiated, in which I include myself, to the effect the occult has had, is having, and will have on the American experience." -John S.D. Eisenhower, author of The Bitter Woods: The Battle of the Bulge and So Far From God: The U.S. War with Mexico, 1846-1848 "Religious people tend to be afraid of the word occult. Horowitz examines this aspect of life and religion in penetrating ways...and revealing its not unsubstantial influence on mainline Christianity. Truth seekers have always come from the edges. Religion itself should be glad they do." -John Shelby Spong, author of Jesus for the Non-Religious "This book is a delightfully original tour through American history, as seen through the lives of men and women devoted to all manner of mysticism. Across these pages troop spiritualists, prophets, seers, psychics, numerologists, transcendentalists, theosophists, and historical figures from Mary Todd Lincoln to Marcus Garvey to Henry Wallace. Their stories are part of the deep-seated American tradition of searching for the new-a tradition that Occult America both explains and enriches." - Stephen Kinzer, author of Overthrow: Americas Century of Regime Change from Hawaii to Iraq and All the Shahs Men: An American Coup and the Roots of Middle East Terror "Fascinating… Occult America is a serious, wide-ranging study of all the magical, mystical, and spiritual movements that have arisen and influenced American history in often-surprising ways." - Washington Post Book World Podcast " Occult America treats esoteric ideas and movements with an even-handed intellectual studiousness that is too often lost in todays raised-voice discussions about religion and belief systems." - Washington Post Express "One of the most readable histories of American mysticism ever written…This is historical reporting that is crafted so well, it holds the reader much like a Voodoo spell."- Tucson Citizen "Horowitz teases out fascinating stories of the dreamers and planners who flourished along the Psychic Highway…In showing how the paths of these figures occasionally intersected with the likes of Abraham Lincoln, Frederick Douglass and Franklin D. Roosevelt, Horowitz argues that the influence of the occult extends beyond the séance room and into the mainstream of American thought." - Washington Post Book World "A brilliant job of tracking down how positive thinker Norman Vincent Peale borrowed his core self-help philosophy from a religious movement called New Thought." - Washington Times "Exhaustively researched and written in a very accessible style... Occult America fills a gap in the knowledge of religion for most people." - Huntington News, VA "Excellent." - Library Journal "One of the best recent books on patterns of belief." - Fortean Times "A fantastic tour guide to the fringes of reason, high weirdness, deep esoterica, secret societies, and mystery religions." - Boing Boing "Employing extensive research while writing with an authoritative tone, Horowitz succeeds in showing how a new spiritual culture developed in America."- Publishers Weekly Excerpt from Book Chapter one THE PSYCHIC HIGHWAY Yet who knows but the institution of a new order of labourers in the great Spiritual vineyard, is to prove the signal for the outpouring of such blessings as have been hitherto unparalleled in the history of our American Israel. --Western Recorder, 1825 The Age of Reason could seem anything but reasonable for people with unusual religious beliefs--or those accused of them. In 1782, Switzerland sanctioned one of the Western worlds last witch trials, which ended in the torture and beheading of a rural housemaid. In 1791, the Vatican sentenced the legendary Italian occultist called Cagliostro to death on charges of heresy and Freemasonry. Although his execution was stayed, the self-styled "High Priest of the Egyptian Mysteries" died of disease four years later in the dungeons of the Inquisition. In eighteenth-century England, a young woman with the simple name of Ann Lee, living in the industrial town of Manchester on Toad Lane (where she was born in a leap year), told of magical visions and spoke of prophecies. The girl--who belonged to a radical Christian sect that would become known as the Shaking Quakers, or the Shakers--was hounded, beaten, and jailed on charges of sorcery and public disruption. Local authorities were aghast at the otherworldly possession that seemed to grip her and the other Shakers when they gyrated and shook in spirit trances. But she was not destined to become another casualty. Ann Lee escaped. In 1774, the woman now called Mother Ann sailed from Liverpool to New York with eight followers and hangers-on. They included an unfaithful husband with whom she had already suffered through the birth and death of four infants. As the legend goes, the ship almost capsized in a storm. But Ann, in a state of eerie calm as waves crashed over the bow, told the captain that no harm would befall them. She reported seeing "two bright angels of God" on the mast. The ship survived. After toiling at menial labor in New York City, the pilgrims--now twelve, minus Anns husband--scraped together enough resources in 1776 to form a tiny colony in the knotty, marshy fields of Niskayuna, near Albany in New Yorks Hudson Valley. The twelve apostles, as they saw themselves, anointed the place Wisdoms Valley. It was a punishing, swampy stretch of two hundred acres swept barren by icy winds in the winter and transformed into muddy, mosquito-infested fields in the summer. Their neighbors were no friendlier than the landscape. Angry rumors painted Mother Ann and the Shakers--all sworn pacifists--as British sympathizers or spies. Revolutionary authorities briefly jailed the religious leader in Albany on charges of sedition. During a Shaker missionary trip to Petersham, Massachusetts, a band of thirty townsmen seized Mother Ann and subjected the celibate woman to the humiliation of disrobing, ostensibly to determine whether she was an English agent in drag. Some accused her of witchcraft or heresy. ("There is no witchcraft but sin," Mother Ann evenly countered.) But, oddly, the little sect--celibate, poor, steeped in a life of hard labor and little rest--began to grow. Following a brutal upstate New York winter in 1780, two men from across the Hudson River in the farming community of New Lebanon took advantage of an early spring thaw to visit the Shaker settlement. The men were disappointed followers of one of the many Baptist revivals that had been sweeping the region, and they longed to see the woman whom followers called Christ returned in female form. When they located Mother Ann and her colony in the wilderness, they were astonished at the small groups survival. They began asking Mother Ann about her mystical teachings and rumors of the sects practices, in which members spoke in prophecies, saw visions of the dead, and danced, jumped, and shouted in the thrall of the Holy Spirit. "We are the people who turn the world upside down," Mother Ann enigmatically told them. The men returned to New Lebanon to spread word of the people in the woods--and more curiosity seekers trekked to Niskayuna. Strange natural events drove newcomers into Mother Anns little world. On May 19, 1780, many parts of New England experienced "The Dark Day"--a period when the daytime skies mysteriously blackened and the suns rays were blotted out. The cause may have been a rash of local fires to clear fields, but the effect was panic over the coming of Armageddon. Mother Anns warnings about the debased nature of the world suddenly seemed prophetic--and new converts came to her. To the Shakers, it was all expected. The previous year, Mother Ann had told her followers to store up extra provisions: "We shall have company enough, before another year comes about, to consume it all." Soon New Lebanon itself sprouted a much bigger colony, eventually sporting the immaculate whitewashed buildings, tidy yards, and brick meetinghouses for which the Shakers became famous. Though Mother Ann died in 1784, her influence extended further in death than in life. The late 1830s saw the dawn of a feverish and profoundly influential period of Shaker activity called "Mother Anns Work." The departed leader appeared as an otherworldly spirit guide directing a vast range of supernatural activity and instruction. Shaker villages--now spread as far south as Kentucky--recorded visits from spirits of historical figures and vanquished Indian tribes. The devout reported receiving ghostly visions and songs, which they turned into strangely beautiful paintings and haunting hymns (many of which still survive). Villagers spoke in foreign tongues, writhing and rolling on the floors in meetings that lasted all night--some even getting drunk on "spirit gifts" of unseen wine or Indian tobacco. In an America that had not yet experienced the Spiritualist wave of s Details ISBN0553385151 Author Mitch Horowitz Short Title OCCULT AMER Pages 304 Language English ISBN-10 0553385151 ISBN-13 9780553385151 Media Book Format Paperback DEWEY 130 Year 2010 Publication Date 2010-10-05 Country of Publication United States AU Release Date 2010-10-05 NZ Release Date 2010-10-05 US Release Date 2010-10-05 UK Release Date 2010-10-05 Place of Publication New York Publisher Random House USA Inc Imprint Bantam Dell Publishing Group, Div of Random House, Inc Subtitle White House Seances, Ouija Circles, Masons, and the Secret Mystic History of Our Nation Audience General We've got this At The Nile, if you're looking for it, we've got it. With fast shipping, low prices, friendly service and well over a million items - you're bound to find what you want, at a price you'll love! TheNile_Item_ID:33776047;

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