EBOOK

Beltane

A Theology of Fire and the Proof of Form

Kristi Hall
(0)
Year
2026
Language
English

About

Intensity is not the same as truth.

Beltane is the season that proves this. The fire at the center of the year does not reward what feels most alive. It tests what can remain itself under sustained heat - what can enter union without dissolving, generate without exhausting its source, and meet the most demanding conditions the year imposes and carry what it has become into everything that follows.
This is not a book about May Day ritual. It is not a celebration of fertility or a guide to seasonal passion. It is a theology of what fire actually does - to growth, to relationship, to the forms that must sustain themselves when intensity stops being gentle.

Across ten chapters in three parts, Kristi Hall develops a structural theology of Beltane unlike anything else in contemporary Pagan writing. Part I examines intensity itself - how fire works as a condition rather than a feeling, and why amplification reveals form rather than producing it. Part II reads the Goddess, the God, and the act of union under maximum charge, holding the discipline that generation without dissolution requires. Part III addresses what the season makes consequential: desire, overextension, boundary under heat, and the threshold of offering that Beltane prepares but does not complete.

The book refuses both the flattening of Beltane into celebration and the reduction of seasonal theology into inspiration. Its argument is structural, its prose disciplined, its application direct. Readers of Hall's earlier work - Imbolc: A Theology of Winter and the Making of Spring and The Timing Wound - will recognize the approach. Readers new to her will find a theology that takes contemporary Pagan practice seriously as a site of real intellectual work.

Beltane is the third volume in the Wheel of the Year series from Inner Planes Alchemy, an independent publisher of theological work within contemporary polytheist and Pagan frameworks. Each volume in the series treats one sabbat as a distinct theological problem rather than as a point on a decorative cycle.

For practitioners ready to take Beltane seriously.

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