RavenWolf received her Third Degree Initiation from a member of the Serpent Stone family, a pagan congregation.[clarification needed] While studying under a British Traditional Witch who claimed to have ties to the International Red Garters in Britain, Silver also became connected with a family lineaged witch who was the last in his line of the tradition. It was this mentorship that prompted the beginning of the Black Forest Circle and Seminary in the 1990s.[citation needed], The Black Forest Circle and Seminary is an organization that contains hundreds of covens spanning the United States and Canada.
Until the 2010s, she appeared as a lecturer and workshop facilitator at events in the Neo-Pagan community. She was active in Wiccan anti-discrimination issues.[1] She was also a Powwower, having adopted the Pennsylvania Dutch practice in a neo-Pagan context.[2]
RavenWolf is the author of over 17 books on Wicca and Paganism in general.[3] She has also written several novels. Currently, her books have been translated into Czech, Spanish, Italian, German, Russian, Hungarian, Dutch and Portuguese. She is the director of the Wiccan/Pagan Press Alliance Midnight Drive.[4]
Bibliography
This article contains a list that has not been properly sorted. Specifically, it does not follow the Manual of Style for lists of works (often, though not always, due to being in reverse-chronological order). See MOS:LISTSORT for more information. Please improve this article if you can. (May 2023)
Nonfiction
American Folk Magick: Charms, Spells & Herbals (1999) Llewellyn Publications ISBN978-1-56718-720-5
Hex Craft: Dutch Country Pow-wow Magick (1997) Llewellyn Publications ISBN978-1-56718-723-6
Journey of Souls: Case Studies of Life Between Lives by Michael Newton (introduction by Silver Ravenwolf) (2002) Llewellyn Publications ISBN978-1-56718-485-3
^Wohlberg, Steve (2005). Hour of the Witch. Destiny Image Publishers. p. 127.
^Kriebel, David W. (2007). Powwowing Among the Pennsylvania Dutch: A Traditional Medical Practice in the Modern World. Pennsylvania State University Press. p. 41.