Witchgate
Author Susan Elizabeth Pattishall
Format Paperback
ISBN 1552126617
Publisher Susan E. Pattishall
Published 2001
Pages 308
Publisher Description

A twenty-first century satire on the vital side,

Witchgate is the story of spying without trying. Narrated in the first person, it takes the reader into the imaginative wanderings of a witch's mind. With realism and fantasy, the author and Sebastiana, the witch, take you to matters that depict the slapdash side of the 1980s to the present. Showing mystic intuition that is definitely realistic, witch identification is not always respect for the netherworld. It is a secret world of intense, counterclockwise awareness. The story is almost a spy's handbook.
     Their brilliant conversation is one of helping one another through life's choredom—not whoredom. It is serious to see the unlikely accomplice, a beautiful and eloquently charming author, in one misadventure by chaos after another, but you are relieved when you realize she has dealt effectively with her antagonists. The author had no choice but to join her drug-free, sober, educated, inexperienced, and well-meaning gracefulness to the ‘other’ way of life. Her chaotic adventures arise from militancy, prejudice, sorrow, admiration, uncertainty, love, financial sabotage, and one of the cruel conspiracies among those of Irangate revealed in this true story of the author and ‘Sebastiana’.
     This story comparing the life of a witch to the public gain of awareness about salient issues portrays history to an informative degree, softening perspectives that cling to obscurity. Written to emphasize awareness, it leads to the subtle conclusion that we cannot go deeply into the reasons why some people wish that they could be notorious. I am confident that Witchgate touches upon the subjects of taste and having class effectively. The successful blending of imagination and reality, making it possible to grasp the forbidden truthfulness, reveals weapons deals and untrustworthy characters. It seeks to inspire a sense of the injustice being done to men and women forced to deal with terrorist leaders and their connections. It seeks this as well for those persons in the US who must seek the help of the now corrupted services of the state.
     For me, it was as if reading a map of everything humans could possibly face from an evil directorate. The peccadillo is explained to the reader before it all becomes evidence in the cosmos. This story proves the ability to think and rationalize is isolated by weaponry is symbolism. Read it to witness the foolish abeyance of minds involved in a hard-core trade. It is a good saga to read to face the real world. It is political, fictionalized, and satirical—truth. The scientific theories and questions are quite logical and helpful to non-scientists.

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