Fiona Horne Books in Order
Browse Fiona Horne's books in order, with quick summaries, beginner-friendly starting points, and a short bio covering her modern witchcraft and oracle titles.
Last updated: July 6, 2026
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Publication Order
14 books
Seven Days to a Magickal New You
by Fiona Horne
2001
Built as a weeklong reset, this book maps each day to a different planetary mood and purpose. Horne offers rituals, affirmations, colors, herbs, and small daily practices for renewal, clarity, and confidence.
Magickal Sex
by Fiona Horne
2002
Horne brings witchcraft into the bedroom with playful rituals, spells, and sensual exercises for solo readers and couples. The focus is on confidence, desire, and using magick to deepen intimacy and self-knowledge.
Life's A Witch!
by Fiona Horne
2003
This early teen guide mixes simple spells with advice about peer pressure, family, friendships, and first love. Horne writes with a chatty, encouraging tone, using her own experiences to make witchcraft feel less mysterious.
Witchin'
by Fiona Horne
2003
Written for teen witches, this handbook tackles school, parents, friendships, crushes, and self-image alongside simple spells. Horne keeps the tone upbeat and practical, with advice aimed at helping young readers feel stronger and more at home in themselves.
Pop! Goes the Witch
by Fiona Horne
2004
This anthology-style guide gathers Fiona Horne and other contributors to explore modern witchcraft from many angles. It looks at everyday practice, media, sexuality, identity, and the wide range of people who call themselves witches.
Bewitch a Man
by Fiona Horne
2006
A playful relationship spell book for readers who want a little magick in their love life. Horne shares charms, rituals, and confidence-building tips for attraction, romance, and keeping the spark alive.
LA Witch
by Fiona Horne
2007
After moving to Los Angeles, Horne charts her shift from solitary practice to forming a coven. The book mixes personal stories with practical advice on group ritual, ethics, history, and the basics of coven life.
The Coven
by Fiona Horne
2007
A blend of memoir and hands-on guide, this book follows Horne as she forms a coven in Los Angeles. It looks at shared ritual, group dynamics, celebration, and the everyday realities of practicing witchcraft with other people.
Witch
by Fiona Horne
2012
When Australian teenager Vania moves to Summerland, California, she feels oddly at home and soon finds other teens drawn to magic. As their new coven investigates a local mystery, they attract a darker force that wants something from them.
Witch
by Fiona Horne
2012
Part guide and part personal journey, this book introduces modern witchcraft through rituals, festivals, spells, and everyday practice. Horne also folds in her own story, aiming to make Wicca feel approachable to curious newcomers.
Naked Witch
by Fiona Horne
2018
Horne's autobiography follows her from a mystical childhood in suburban Sydney to music, media fame, and public life as a witch. It is a frank memoir about reinvention, struggle, and the cost of building a very visible life.
Magick of You Oracle
by Fiona Horne
2019
An oracle deck and guidebook built for self-reflection and clearer inner guidance. Its messages focus on uncovering hidden patterns, working through obstacles, and finding a steadier sense of purpose.
The Art of Witch
by Fiona Horne
2019
Horne moves past basic tools and potions to talk about ethics, resilience, and what modern witchcraft can look like in everyday life. Part manifesto and part practical guide, it blends personal stories with grounded advice.
Teen Magick
by Fiona Horne
2021
A modern guide for teen witches that mixes self-discovery with practical tools, spells, and sacred days. Horne writes about parents, school, love, and purpose in a direct voice meant to build confidence as much as craft.
Where should I start?
If you're new to her core witchcraft books: Witch → The Art of Witch
If you want a teen-friendly place to begin: Teen Magick → Life's A Witch! → Witchin'
If you want the life story behind the public persona: Naked Witch
If covens and group practice interest you most: The Coven → LA Witch
If you'd rather start with cards and reflection: Magick of You Oracle
Author bio
Fiona Horne was born in Sydney, and the bushland around suburban Sydney sits near the start of her story. In her own retelling, she was the child who built little altars outdoors and felt drawn to ritual long before she had a formal name for it.
That mix of ordinary suburbia and private spiritual life stayed with her. Much of her writing brings witchcraft back to daily life, to confidence, friendship, self-trust, and the small rituals people build for themselves.
She has never stayed in one lane.
Before most readers knew her as an author, she was the lead singer of the Australian electro-rock band Def FX. The band made her a public figure in the 1990s, and radio and television work followed. When she started publishing books on modern witchcraft in the late 1990s, she brought that same open, public-facing voice to the page.
Her early breakout title, Witch, mixed personal story with an accessible introduction to modern witchcraft. Later books such as Pop! Goes the Witch and The Art of Witch kept pushing that idea of a contemporary craft, one that belongs in the present rather than behind glass. Part of the appeal is how plainly she writes, even when the subject is ritual, ethics, or belief.
Horne has also spent a lot of time writing for younger or newer readers. Life's A Witch!, Witchin', and Teen Magick all meet readers where they are, with talk of school, family, love, self-image, and the basic tools of the craft. Even when the subject is spellwork, her books often circle back to identity, resilience, and learning how to stand on your own feet.
That same inward, practical streak shows up in Magick of You Oracle, which turns her interest in intuition and self-reflection into a card deck format.
Community is another big thread in her work.
After moving to Los Angeles in 2000, Horne wrote about group practice and shared ritual in books like The Coven and LA Witch. Those titles look at what happens when witchcraft stops being solitary and becomes something done with other people, with all the rewards and friction that can come with that. She later turned more directly to memoir in Naked Witch, which follows her life from childhood through fame, upheaval, and reinvention.
That word, reinvention, fits her well. Beyond music and books, her public life has included television, commercial flying, and humanitarian and animal aid work in the Caribbean after the 2017 hurricanes. Recent publisher pages place her in New South Wales, Australia, though travel and movement still feel central to the life she describes.
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