This is a great deal combining TWO books.
Hekate: Then And Now - Our Goddess Her Correspondences and Practices Over Through
AND
Hekate: Devotional Prayers And Praise
This book is not a spellbook, not a handbook of tricks, and not a list of things to ask a goddess for. It is a devotional work, deliberately structured around presence rather than petition. Each prayer within it is an act of standing still at the crossroads and acknowledging what already stands there. Hekate appears here not as a dispenser of favors, but as Anassa, Guide, Gatekeeper, Witness, and Constant. The prayers are written to be spoken without urgency, without bargaining, and without the quiet anxiety of wanting something in return. This is devotion stripped of transaction.
The prayers move through Hekate's epithets with intention and gravity. Each name opens a different door, not to power, but to relationship. Borborophorba is honored without euphemism or apology. Psychopompe is addressed without fear or melodrama. Philosophylax, Terpsimbrotos, Hegemone, Pantos Kosmos Kleidouchos, Azostos, Eneroi, each is approached as a distinct presence with its own gravity, function, and temperament. These prayers are not interchangeable, and they are not decorative. They are meant to be lived with, returned to, and allowed to work slowly on the practitioner rather than the other way around.
Throughout the book, there is an insistence on historical respect without academic stiffness. The tone does not flatten Hekate into symbolism alone, nor does it inflate her into abstraction. Her roots in Anatolia, her movement through Greek religious life, her chthonic and liminal roles, and her long association with divination, thresholds, spirits, and guardianship are woven into the devotional framework without turning the work into a lecture. This is a living theology, informed by history but not trapped by it.
The explanatory sections are as intentional as the prayers themselves. They speak directly to a gap in modern devotional practice, the loss of reverence that asks for nothing. The book challenges the contemporary habit of approaching deities as tools, algorithms, or vending machines. It argues, calmly and firmly, that devotion without request is not empty. It is formative. It reshapes the practitioner's posture toward the sacred and toward themselves. Hekate, in this framework, is not summoned. She is acknowledged.
The final prayers and closing reflections draw the work together into a cohesive whole. The long concluding prayer is not a summary so much as an immersion, a standing within the full field of Hekate's many forms at once. It is meant to be returned to across seasons and years, not consumed once and set aside. The closing pages reinforce that this book is not meant to replace practice, but to deepen it. It assumes a reader who is willing to slow down, listen, and remain present without guarantee.
This book is for practitioners who are tired of spectacle, shortcuts, and hollow invocations. It is for those who understand that devotion is a discipline, not a performance. If you are looking for spells to get what you want quickly, this is not that book. If you are looking to build a lasting, sober, and respectful devotional relationship with Hekate in her fullness, then this work was written with you in mind.