What's going on in the night sky right now? Find out with Star Lore Historian Mary Stewart Adams, who narrates the stories written across the sky each week in order to restore the mythic grandeur of knowing the stars. Here, ancient mythologies are woven together with poetry, astrology, contemporary astronomy, and the new star wisdom astrosophy, to reveal the brilliant story of now.
The Moon moves up the western sky passing the evening planets as though she were running her hand through a strand of pearls this week
The experience Venus' unveiling at eclipse is a sacred process of initiation into a deeper understanding of the force of love in the world
On the eternal struggle toward the higher nature of being human.
This week's lunar eclipse at Pleiades stirs an ancient mystery of the stars in the human form.
The waxing Crescent Moon has some spectacular encounters this week
Moon, Mercury, Uranus and a whale, conspiring to offer us all an experience of the strange, new, and wonderful.
Orion returns, and now we can be "drawn through the space between worlds, by incense and candlelight.”
Pegasus comes highest as the season of the dead approaches. What's up with that?
From chaos to cosmos in the slow turn of the planets.
The shepherd has taken the West wind gently in hand while the king stands guard over the dragon, where that beast stirs in the North, its stoney sleep troubled by the princess...
This week marks the 700th anniversary of the epic poet's death, and the Moon activates his axis among the stars
New Moon, Venus and Spica, an endless fountain of immortal drink.
There’s a discernible pulse, like a heartbeat, sounding out in the star picture this week, when the Moon meets the star Regulus at dawn, and Venus meets the star Spica at dusk.
The Summer Triangle sweeps over the top of the sky, a portal open to receive all your best rhymes and tales.
There’s a True Blue Moon headed our way, which is not just the second Full Moon in one calendar month.
The falling stars are like seeds of the new year this week with the Perseid Meteor Shower.
What does Harry Potter have in common with Shakespeare's Juliet?
The delta star is the fourth brightest star in a constellation, and this week it lends its name to the wishing stars falling through the summer sky.
The July 23rd Thunder Moon flings open the doors on last year's rare meeting of Jupiter and Saturn.