Welcome To Witchsey Marketplace! - Pull up a broomstick and stay awhile ✨Check out our Ritual Oils! Infused with intention, applied with power! What magic do you seek today?Next giveaway is June 1st for all qualifying purchases in April! Witchin' Good Thyme and Bit O'Magick are this months Sponsored Vendors!Welcome To Witchsey Marketplace! - Pull up a broomstick and stay awhile ✨Check out our Ritual Oils! Infused with intention, applied with power! What magic do you seek today?Next giveaway is June 1st for all qualifying purchases in April! Witchin' Good Thyme and Bit O'Magick are this months Sponsored Vendors!Welcome To Witchsey Marketplace! - Pull up a broomstick and stay awhile ✨Check out our Ritual Oils! Infused with intention, applied with power! What magic do you seek today?Next giveaway is June 1st for all qualifying purchases in April! Witchin' Good Thyme and Bit O'Magick are this months Sponsored Vendors!Welcome To Witchsey Marketplace! - Pull up a broomstick and stay awhile ✨Check out our Ritual Oils! Infused with intention, applied with power! What magic do you seek today?Next giveaway is June 1st for all qualifying purchases in April! Witchin' Good Thyme and Bit O'Magick are this months Sponsored Vendors!
Divination Conjure Style by Starr Casas — an authentic practitioner’s guide to reading cards, throwing bones, and other forms of household fortune-telling within the Southern hoodoo and rootwork tradition. Casas, a respected conjure elder, shares methods passed through lineage for accessible and powerful divination practice rooted in African American folk magic. Essential for serious hoodoo students.
Description:
Quick Specs
Author: Starr Casas
Illustrator: Josef Bailey
Format: Softcover, 256 pages
Size/Quantity: One book, 6 x 9 inches
Best for: Southern folk divination, playing card reading, bone throwing, household fortune-telling
Southern Folk Divination Beyond the Tarot Deck
Divination Conjure Style is Starr Casas's dedicated treatment of the divination methods she learned at home, techniques that were transmitted orally within conjure families and rarely written down until now. The book's central focus is playing-card divination, the kind of card reading that predates tarot in American folk culture and relies on a standard 52-card deck rather than specialty esoteric tools. Casas explains suit meanings, card combinations, timing indicators using months and seasons, and the critical role of repetition when three or more identical cards appear in a spread.
The book also covers bone throwing, bibliomancy, pyromancy, and blue-water scrying. These are the techniques of people who were poor, isolated, or living in regions hostile to open spiritual practice, and the methods reflect that: they rely on objects already present in the household rather than purchased magical supplies. Josef Bailey, a New Orleans artist, created illustrations of conjure-style playing cards to Casas's specifications, giving the book a visual vocabulary rooted in the tradition it describes.
Workings and Practical Conjure Applications
What separates this book from most divination titles is the chapter on workings: spells that use the reading itself as a ritual component. Casas covers a justice working and explains what "justified work" means within conjure ethics, a practical distinction that rarely appears in mainstream divination books. This is not a system imported from Wicca or ceremonial magic; it's the domestic folk practice of the American South, rooted in African, European, and Indigenous strands of magic that merged under conditions of necessity.
Readers coming from a tarot background will find this book genuinely different in tone and method. The system doesn't ask you to buy anything new; it asks you to pay attention to what you already have and to listen closely when the cards repeat. You can find this title alongside other hoodoo and folk magic books in my collection.
How to Use Divination Conjure Style
A progression through the three major practice areas covered in the book.
Start with Playing Card Reading
Start with the playing card section, which forms the bulk of the book. Starr Casas assigns suits to seasons and months, and she emphasizes watching for repeating cards. Three or more of the same card in a reading shifts the entire story.
Build a Bone Throwing Set
Work through the bone throwing chapter using small found objects from around the house as your set. Casas explains how to assign meanings to each piece based on its origin and appearance, rather than buying a pre-made set.
Practice Household Divination Methods
Practice the household fortune-telling methods like bibliomancy, pyromancy, and blue-water scrying. These techniques require no purchased tools and form the backbone of what makes conjure divination distinct from tarot or oracle-based practices.
The Tarot Fellow Standard
I carry this book because it fills a genuine gap in the divination section: Southern folk methods that have almost nothing to do with tarot. Most divination books sold here are card-based and draw from modern Wiccan or New Age frameworks. Casas writes from inside the tradition, transmitting methods that were family knowledge, and the practical ethics section around justified work is something you don't find in most divination titles. If you're drawn to folk practices, you can also browse my hoodoo and rootwork supply collection for complementary tools.
Frequently Asked Questions
What divination methods does this book cover?
Divination Conjure Style focuses on Southern folk methods: playing-card reading, bone throwing, bibliomancy, pyromancy, and household scrying. These differ from tarot in that they use everyday objects rather than specialized decks.
Who is Starr Casas?
Starr Casas is a New Orleans-based conjure practitioner who has written several books on hoodoo and rootwork. She learned these divination methods as family traditions and describes them as orally transmitted knowledge not previously published.
Is this a tarot learning book?
No. The book focuses on playing cards, bones and found objects, household scrying methods, and bibliomancy. It is a Southern folk divination resource, not a tarot guide, and is distinct from standard tarot learning books.
Does the book include spells or workings?
Yes. The book includes workings, which are spells using the reading itself as a ritual component. Casas covers justice workings and other practical conjure applications that extend beyond simple fortune-telling into active folk magic practice.
Divination Conjure Style by Starr Casas — Hoodoo Fortune-Telling