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!
Sticks, Stones, Roots & Bones by Stephanie Rose Bird — the 2005 COVR Award-winning 288-page guide to hoodoo, rootwork, and the African American spiritual traditions. Bird covers mojo bag making, candle magic, herbs, stones, and the cosmology behind the practice with respect and authority. Essential for practitioners studying hoodoo from within its own cultural lineage, and a landmark text for any serious occult library.
Description:
Quick Specs
Author: Stephanie Rose Bird
Publisher: Llewellyn
Format: 288-page paperback; 2005 COVR Award Winner
Best for: Hoodoo practice, rootwork, mojo bag making, African American spiritual traditions
Hoodoo from the Inside: Cultural Authority and Rootwork Practice
Stephanie Rose Bird grew up practicing Hoodoo. Her family's rootwork tradition traces back through the American South during slavery, to West African origins that Bird documents with the care of a scholar who has also lived the tradition. That insider position matters enormously in a field where many published guides approach Hoodoo from the outside, often defaulting to Eurocentric frameworks when the African lineage becomes complex. Bird does not do this. She traces the roots of Hoodoo, specifically the term "sticks, stones, roots, and bones," to West Africa and documents the influence of Kongo cosmology, West African herbalism, and the minkisi bundle tradition on Southern conjure practice.
This is the 2005 COVR Award Winner for best book in the divination and magic category, which reflects its standing in the practitioner community rather than just academic review. Bird's scope is comprehensive: she covers the historical origins of Hoodoo from its West African foundation through its American adaptations, then moves into practical application with recipes, formulas, and working guides for mojo bags, spiritual cleansing, candle rituals, love and luck draws, ancestor veneration, and psychic protection. Unlike the Uncrossing manual's focus on removing crossed conditions, this book gives you the full range of Hoodoo practice in one place.
Mojo Bags, Conjure Hands, and the Working Rootworker's Reference
The title describes the four categories of ingredients used in a traditional Hoodoo mojo bag: plant material (sticks), minerals (stones), roots, and animal bones. Bird unpacks the logic of each category with botanical specificity and historical grounding. John the Conqueror root, angelica root, Queen Elizabeth root, and Adam and Eve root are all covered in depth, along with guidance on responsible sourcing given that some traditional roots come from protected or endangered species. Bird explicitly names which roots are at risk and offers substitutions, which is practical and ecologically responsible information you don't find in most conjure books.
The book also addresses the ethics and cultural context of Hoodoo practice directly. Bird does not shy away from the fact that Hoodoo was practiced in secret during slavery, that the word "Hoodoo" was rarely spoken openly in African American communities, and that commercialization has distorted much of what the public understands about the tradition. Reading this book alongside a red flannel mojo bag is the authentic starting point for anyone serious about rootwork as a living practice rooted in its actual cultural history.
How to Use Sticks, Stones, Roots and Bones
How to use this guide effectively across your Hoodoo practice.
Read the Introduction and Cultural Foundation First
Begin with Bird's introduction, establishing her cultural connection to Hoodoo. Understanding West African roots matters before working formulas. Bird writes from inside the tradition, giving this book authority most Hoodoo guides cannot claim.
Work the Mojo Bag Chapters with Materials in Hand
Work the mojo bag chapters with a red flannel bag in hand. Bird explains what goes inside and why each ingredient matters in Southern conjure. The ingredients follow tradition's logic, not arbitrary or personal preference of the practitioner.
Return to the Book as a Practitioner's Reference
Use the book as a reference across your practice, returning to chapters as situations arise. Bird covers cleansing, ancestor work, love draws, and psychic protection. This is a guide to revisit regularly, not a text to read once and set aside.
The Tarot Fellow Standard
I carry Sticks, Stones, Roots and Bones because it is the foundational Hoodoo practice guide in the catalog, and because Stephanie Rose Bird's cultural authority is irreplaceable. Customers who want to work with mojo bags seriously need this book alongside the red flannel bag. I won't stock a Hoodoo reference that approaches the tradition from the outside without acknowledging it, and this one does not do that. Explore my full Voodoo, Hoodoo, and Santeria book collection for additional rootwork titles, and browse my Hoodoo and conjure supplies for the bags, herbs, and condition oils that go alongside it.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Hoodoo and how is it different from Voodoo?
Hoodoo blends West African spirituality, Native American herbalism, and Judeo-Christian ritual in an African American folk tradition. Bird traces her family's practice to the American South during slavery, giving this book authority most texts lack.
What topics does Sticks, Stones, Roots and Bones cover?
Bird covers mojo bags, rootwork, spiritual cleansing, ancestor veneration, candle rituals, love and luck draws, and dream work. The book won the 2005 COVR Award and is widely used as a reference by practicing rootworkers and serious Hoodoo students.
Is Stephanie Rose Bird a credible Hoodoo author?
Bird writes from direct cultural inheritance. Her family practiced Hoodoo, and she traces the tradition to West Africa. That lived perspective distinguishes this from survey texts or manuals by outside researchers who approached Hoodoo academically.
How does this book compare to Bird's other Hoodoo books?
Sticks, Stones covers Hoodoo history through working recipes and is the foundational text. Bird's 365 Days of Hoodoo is a daily companion guide. Both pair well, but this is the starting point for anyone new to rootwork and Southern conjure.
Sticks, Stones, Roots & Bones by Stephanie Rose Bird — Hoodoo Mojo & Conjure Book