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Some twenty years ago, anthropologist Carlos Castaneda electrified millions of readers by describing his initiation--under the Yaqui Indian brujo Don Juan--into an alternate reality. Now Taisha Abelar, who was taught by the female members of Don Juan's group, recounts her own "crossing" in this arresting book. While traveling in Mexico, Abelar became involved with a group of sorcerers and began a rigorous physical and mental training process designed to enable her to breach the limits of ordinary perception. The Sorcerers Crossing details that process, giving us a highly practical sense of the responsibilities and perils that face a woman sorcerer. Abelar's enthralling story is invaluable as a virtual "sorcerers manual", as anthropology, and as a provocative work of women's spirituality.
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Taisha's book follows the teaching and writing style of Castaneda, though it's a much lighter and less dense read than your average Castaneda. The language is very easy to read but sometimes it's hard to comprehend.
The biggest value of the book is that it gives you a step by step technique for recapitulation. And it is a powerful technique.
The only thing I didn't like is the way it ends. It gets suddenly more and more interesting towards the end and then abruptly everything stops.