Anonymous ID: 3a23aa July 19, 2022, 7:09 p.m. No.16766233   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6237 >>6318 >>6447 >>6460 >>6731

>>16766171

tyb

does any anon have a good site to use to read free books online?

anon is not afraid to thread into dark territory

o7

this is not the full book, it just has the first 12 pages with a index of the tales.

https://archive.org/details/lilithscavejewis00schw/mode/2up?view=theater

Anonymous ID: 3a23aa July 19, 2022, 7:14 p.m. No.16766251   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16766237

anon could sign on to some dodgy site with email but like to keep anonymity

archived this a while ago, decided to see if anon could track down a pdf version,

anons here are pretty good at that, plus this anon has also posted free books worth reading with pdf's for anons so they do not have to go looking or buying.

we maybe poor, but knowledge shared is knowledge gained.

Anonymous ID: 3a23aa July 19, 2022, 7:46 p.m. No.16766413   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16766376

another anon recommended it, anon saved the image cap and description, anon has read lots of books including some of the very difficult one like morals and dogma still not finished it btw, a lot of manly p hall, behold the pale horse, also a long dig on the masons who are basically worshipping a female deity, why they wear aprons. kek

actually lost link but fantastic site showing how the history unfolded from the crusades and female worship whether it by the blessed mary to Lilith's to Baphomet a hybrid and where they want to go, entertaining reading.

in god we trust

Lilith's Cave: Jewish Tales of the Supernatural

by Howard Schwartz (Selections),

Uri Shulevitz (Illustrator)

Once upon a time in the city of Tunis, a flirtatious young girl was drawn into Lilith's dangerous web by glancing repeatedly at herself in the mirror. It seems that a demon daughter of the legendary Lilith had made her home in the mirror and would soon completely possess the unsuspecting girl. Such tales of terror and the supernatural occupy an honored position in the Jewish folkloric tradition.

Howard Schwartz has superbly translated and retold fifty of the best of these folktales, now collected into one volume for the first time. Gathered from countless sources ranging from the ancient Middle East to twelfth-century Germany and later Eastern European oral tradition, these captivating stories include Jewish variants of the Pandora and Persephone myths and of such famous folktales as The Fisherman and His Wife, The Sorcerer's Apprentice, and Bluebeard, as well as several tales from the Middle Ages that have never before been published.

focusing on crucial turning points in lifebirth, marriage, and deaththe tales feature wandering spirits, marriage with demons, werewolves, speaking heads, possession by dybbuks (souls of the dead who enter the bodies of the living), and every other kind of supernatural adversary. Readers will encounter a carpenter who is haunted when he makes a violin from the wood of a coffin; a wife who saves herself from the demoness her husband has inadvertently married by agreeing to share him for an hour each day; and the age-old tale of Lilith, Adam's first wife, who refused to submit to him and instead banished herself from the Garden of Eden to give birth to the demons of the world.

Drawn from Rabbinic sources, medieval Jewish folklore, Hasidic texts, and oral tradition, these stories will equally entrance readers of Jewish literature and those with an affection for fantasy and the supernatural.