The Conjuring of America, Lindsey Stewart
The Conjuring of America, Lindsey Stewart
List: $27.99 | Sale: $19.59
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The Conjuring of America
Mojos, Mermaids, Medicine, and 400 Years of Black Women's Magic

Author: Lindsey Stewart

Narrator: Adenrele Ojo

Unabridged: 10 hr 40 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Legacy Lit

Published: 07/29/2025


Synopsis

Kirkus Reviews Best Books of 2025 | BookRiot's Best Books of 2025 | NPR's New Books to Read | Ms. Magazine's Most Anticipated Feminist Book

A crucial telling of U.S. history centering the Black women whose magic gave rise to the rich tapestry of American culture, wellness, and spirituality that we see today—from Vicks VapoRub and Aunt Jemima’s pancake mix, to the magic of Disney’s The Little Mermaid (2023), and the all-American blue jean.

Emerging first on plantations in the American South, enslaved conjure women used their magic to treat illnesses. These women combined their ancestral spiritual beliefs from West Africa with local herbal rituals and therapeutic remedies to create conjure, forging a secret well of health and power hidden to their oppressors and many of the modern-day staples we still enjoy.

In The Conjuring of America, Black feminist philosopher Lindsey Stewart exposes this vital contour of American history. In the face of slavery, Negro Mammies fashioned a legacy of magic that begat herbal experts, fearsome water bearers, and powerful mojos—roles and traditions that for centuries have been passed down to respond to Black struggles in real time. And when Jim Crow was born, Granny Midwives and textile weavers leveled their techniques to protect our civil and reproductive rights, while Candy Ladies fed a generation of freedom crusaders.

Sourcing firsthand accounts the of enslaved, dispatches from the lore of Oshun, and the wisdom of beloved Black women writers, Stewart proves indisputably that conjure informs our lives in ways remarkable and ordinary. Above all, The Conjuring of America is a love letter to the magic Black women used to sow messages of rebellion, freedom, and hope.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Mya on July 14, 2025

Thank you NetGalley for an arc of this book. I am in awe of what I'm learning and how Stewart writes. The resilience of Black women is embedded within each chapter and section. From 400 years ago to today Black women & black girls have been defying odds, been creative, and heroic in every scenario t......more

Goodreads review by Quilted.reads on July 28, 2025

The Conjuring of America is a breathtaking, bone-deep testament to the enduring power of Black women’s magic. At once a historical reckoning, a spiritual archive, and a richly layered celebration, this book doesn’t just tell a story it casts one. From the first page, readers are drawn into a rhythmic......more

Goodreads review by Logan on July 05, 2025

Apropos of its subject, the book is beautiful, tragic, and messy, but its importance wins out. The thesis of the book is a study in the contemporary relevance of the Black Diaspora. The culture of the United States is Black, or Black-derived, and that culture derives from religions and other usually......more

Goodreads review by Nikki Corina on July 22, 2025

The Conjuring of America is a sweeping, enlightening narrative. Lindsey Stewart delivers a powerful exploration into the overlooked legacy of Black women’s magic in shaping American culture. This book is an homage and urgent reminder of how magic has been a force for survival, defiance, and transfor......more

Goodreads review by Kayla on July 28, 2025

Thank you to NetGalley and Grand Central Publishing for an eARC copy of The Conjuring of America by Lindsey Stewart. The Conjuring of America by Lindsey Stewart reclaims and reveres a form of knowledge and resistance too often obscured by mainstream historical narratives: the power of Black women's......more


Quotes

“Lindsey Stewart’s remarkable commitment and tireless research, combined with the breadth of her keen insight, pride, and understanding of her subject matter, are only part of what makes The Conjuring of America so powerful. This exploration of our shamefully ignored and dismissed history is a compelling and essential standout. Important and altogether unique, this read informs and transports as it ushers a glorious cast of influential Black women to life.”—Lucy Anne Hurston, sociologist, niece of Zora Neale Hurston, Speak, So You Can Speak Again

“With The Conjuring of America we welcome Lindsey Stewart to the table of hope, for her work is the deep, courage dive into the sea of lost truths. She recovers the critical treasures from the waters in her breathtaking honest and beautifully rendered new work. And we are the better for it.”—asha bandele, New York Times bestselling co-author of When They Call you a Terrorist and author of Daughter and The Prisoner’s Wife

“Lindsey Stewart's arrival on the scene is not only exciting and powerful, but necessary. Black and feminist history is shamefully incomplete; conjure women are vital parts of our foundation and fabric. I love this book. We need this book!  Now more than ever.”—Patrisse Cullors, co-founder Black Lives Matter and New York Times bestselling author of When They Call You a Terrorist

“In The Conjuring of America, Lindsey Stewart offers nothing less than a rethinking of our national culture through the stories of  'conjure women.' When we talk about who and what has made our culture uniquely American, this essential story must be told, and Dr. Stewart does it with wisdom, erudition, and empathy.”—Jeff Chang, Ford fellow, historian, journalist and music critic, and author of Can’t Stop Won’t Stop, Who We Be, and Water Mirror Echo