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Old Style Conjure by Starr Casas — American Hoodoo & Rootwork Book

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Short description:

Old Style Conjure by Starr Casas — a 256-page guide to American hoodoo written by one of the tradition’s most respected hereditary practitioners. Casas approaches conjure not as a trend or intellectual exercise but as a living, inherited practice — covering the underlying theology, working with spirits, the mechanics of rootwork, and the ethical dimensions of crossing and protection that most books avoid. Essential reading for anyone serious about hoodoo as a spiritual lineage.

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Quick Specs


  • Author: Starr Casas
  • Publisher: Red Wheel/Weiser
  • Size/Quantity: 256 pages, paperback, 5.9 x 8.9 inches
  • Best for: Hoodoo practitioners, rootwork students, folk magic research


American Folk Magic from a Hereditary Practitioner


Conjure, hoodoo, and rootwork are distinctly American traditions, shaped by the African diaspora and the conditions of slavery in the South. Starr Casas is not an outside observer writing about these traditions from a safe scholarly distance. She is a hereditary conjure woman with over forty years of practice, and Old Style Conjure reads like someone passing down knowledge the right way, directly and without embellishment. Judika Illes, author of the Encyclopedia of 5,000 Spells, called Casas "the real deal."


The book opens with a Q&A section that clears up persistent misconceptions about conjure immediately. It is not a religion, it has no initiation requirements, and it is not the same as Santeria or Palo. From there, Casas walks through the foundations: altars, offerings, divination, spirits of conjure, places of power, lights, conjure waters, dirts and dusts, roots and herbs, and the tools of the work. Each chapter reflects actual practice, not reconstructed guesswork.


What the Book Covers


Old Style Conjure is structured for both newcomers and practitioners who want to deepen their existing practice. The chapter on bone reading is particularly strong, and the sections on conjure bags and candle work give clear, practical guidance. Casas includes her own recipes and spells throughout, making this a working reference rather than a historical survey. Published by Red Wheel/Weiser in 2017, it remains one of the most direct and practitioner-grounded introductions to hoodoo available.


How to Use Old Style Conjure


Getting the most from Old Style Conjure means reading it as a practitioner's manual, not a history text.

  1. Start with the Qu0026amp;A Foundation

    Read Chapter 1 before anything else. Casas uses a Qu0026amp;A format to address common misconceptions about conjure: what it is, where it came from, how it relates to Christianity, and what its ethics look like. This grounding prevents later

  2. Build Your Altar and Gather Supplies

    Follow the altar chapter before attempting practical work. Casas is specific about what belongs on a conjure altar and why. A cloth, a candle, and offerings to your ancestors is enough to begin working. Add more tools as your practice develops.

  3. Work the Recipes as Written First

    When you try a working from this book, follow Casas's recipe exactly the first time. She has tested these formulas over decades. Once you understand why each element is included, you can adapt them to your own materials and circumstances.


The Tarot Fellow Standard


I stock Old Style Conjure because it's the kind of book that comes from actual practice. Casas isn't theorizing about hoodoo, she's teaching it the way it was taught to her. That lineage matters when you're learning a tradition that was passed down orally for generations under conditions that made writing it down dangerous. This belongs on the shelf alongside the other practitioner-authored titles in my books collection.


Frequently Asked Questions


Is Old Style Conjure appropriate for complete beginners?

Yes. Casas wrote it for both beginners and experienced practitioners. The opening Qu0026amp;A chapter addresses foundational questions directly, and practical chapters build progressively. No prior knowledge of hoodoo or folk magic is needed to start.

Does Old Style Conjure require any specific religious beliefs?

No. Casas explains clearly that conjure is not a religion. Most historical conjure workers were Christian and the Bible figures prominently, but no specific faith is required to learn from or practice what this book teaches. The work stands alone.

What topics does Old Style Conjure cover?

The book covers altars, offerings, divination, spirits, places of power, candle work, conjure waters, dirts, roots, herbs, conjure bags, and tools of the trade. Each chapter includes Casas's own recipes and spells from over forty years of practice.

Who is Starr Casas?

Starr Casas is a hereditary conjure woman with over forty years of practice. She teaches workshops across the United States, runs Mama Starr's Style LLC in Houston, and is widely respected as one of the most authentic voices in hoodoo today.

Old Style Conjure book cover by Starr Casas featuring a bold rooster illustration — American hoodoo and rootwork paperback.