Jeanna Kadlec

Hi, I’m Jeanna Kadlec

A writer, astrologer, and teacher helping artists re-enchant their lives

I invite you to explore the sacred side of creativity and to make art that feels like truth.

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Jeanna Kadlec

Welcome to my world

Jeanna Kadlec is a believer

I work with writers and artists who know that creative living and the business of making a creative living don’t have to cancel each other out. My work is rooted in honesty, care, and the belief that creativity can be both sacred and sustainable.

Jeanna Kadlec

The Constellation of My Work

Each realm turns like a circle within the instrument — writing, teaching, and community in perfect orbit

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Books

Stories of faith, desire, and transformation.

My memoir Heretic and my forthcoming works explore the sacred and the sensual, the moment where belief meets embodiment.

Explore My Books

courses

Teaching for the creative and the curious.

I guide artists and writers through workshops and long-term mentorship containers that help them nurture their creativity as a sacred practice: sometimes through astrology, sometimes through craft, always through deep attention.

See My Offerings

Community

A gathering for writers and dreamers.

Through my newsletter Astrology for Writers and our active Discord, I hold space for creative souls to connect, reflect, and grow together.

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Featured Book

Heretic: A Queer Revolt Against Evangelicalism, Empire, and the Lies We Are Sold

A memoir of leaving the evangelical church, reckoning with religious trauma while also interrogating just how much evangelicalism has and continues to affect all Americans--via our power structures and pop culture--and how it drives our democracy towards fascism.

Work With Me

My classes, creative containers, and lectures are intended to hold space for folks eager to reimagine what creativity can feel like when it's guided by spirit rather than pressure.

Course
Starts Mar 1

The Grove: Spring/Summer 2026

The Grove is a 6-month community of intentional devotion where you can find magical rituals and spiritual tools to support your creative practice with like-hearted artists and writers: medicine for These Times.

$999
tutorial
1 file
Download

Set Yourself Up 2026: Your 60 Best Days for Creative Success

Includes 60 astrologically supportive dates in 2026 to start, revise, output, input, & launch in an organized, easy-to-reference 142-page guidebook. Ideal for folks in need of a deadline to motivate ~the work~ or who want to plan ahead.

$197
Online
Course
4 Lectures

So You Want To Learn Astrology

A series of four informal 90-minute lectures covering the astro basics you've never had ~personally~ explained to you by a professional astrologer.

$99
all courses and workshops

Testimonials

Love Letters From My Readers and Students

5 stars

A beautiful story of rebirth!

A beautiful story of rebirth! As a non-religious, queer woman living in a very religious culture, this book was eye-opening! So many of the stories seemed so familiar and helped me to better understand the experience of my religious peers! The author writes in a raw, vulnerable voice that felt both authentic and trustworthy.

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Gigi Ropp

5 stars

Thoughtful, intelligent, heartfelt, open, and brave

This memoir was thoughtful, intelligent, heartfelt, open, and brave, and I couldn’t put it down. Jeanna Kadlec’s account of her transition from follower of evangelical Christian dogma, with all of its emphasis on conformity, strict adherence to “biblical womanhood” roles for female members, and policed behavior by church leaders, chronicles her shift to divorced lesbian creative, writer, and astrologer/tarot card reader. As she comes to understand the damage that her church’s rigid fundamental principles and practices can do to its followers, she takes first a leap and then a long adjustment to a different way of life. With new beliefs and a new life, and connecting with other “ex-vangelicals,” she breaks free, but not without a cost. She is still plagued with missing her old identity, missing her former relationship with God, and especially missing the closeness of the community she valued so much within the church. I gave extra points for her explanations of the complexity of her intellectual and emotional shifts and how she had to change, not only her beliefs, but her whole paradigm and mental model, which had been, for her entire childhood and adolescence, based on black-and-white / either-or systems of thinking that were no longer useful to her. Instead she had to come to an understanding of the value of a world view that allows for ambiguity, doubt, questioning, and intuition, a vastly different proposition for someone raised in an environment of conformity where even the notion of exploring other ideas was forbidden. Her new philosophy is something she has had to build “from the ground up,” and is not just a matter of incorporating her gay identify into her old world view.

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Suzanne

5 stars

Made me want to write through my own experiences

A book hasn’t made me think in a long time as much as this one had. Such good commentary on the Midwest, particularly Iowa, in connection with religion and queerness. My religious upbringing certainly wasn’t as strict as the writer’s, but a lot of it connected with me. I also felt very seen in her journey in coming to terms with being a lesbian. Also made me think a lot about the ways in which spirituality exists in my life now in the absence of religion. Much to unpack and made me want to write through my own experiences.

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Hannah Showalter

5 stars

It’s moving. It’s incisive. And it’s a balm...

Jeanna Kadlec is the moment. There has never been a more important time for this memoir, in which Kadlec shares her story of growing up in the evangelical church, getting married, coming out as a lesbian, wrestling with her faith (Jacob-style, to the bone), leaving her husband, and pursuing her wildest dreams in her new life. Weaved throughout the candid narrative are essays that unearth the death-grip the church has on our cultural and political landscapes. It’s moving. It’s incisive. And it’s a balm, too, if you’ve also scuffled with the Lord.

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Heather Hogan

5 stars

This is a must read for anyone

I related to this book so much. I think I highlighted more in this book than I have for any other I've read so far. I honestly wish it had been a little longer, just because I think there's SO MUCH to unpack when you've grown up in the culture that Jeanna Kadlec (and myself, and many many others) have. This is a must read for anyone who has deconstructed and/or considers themselves an "ex-vangelical."

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Jessica Kruse

5 stars

I loved this

Phew, I loved this. The second half in particular had some genuinely perfect essays, it made me think and reconsider some longer held (unconscious) beliefs, and it broke my heart while somehow remaining grounded in a positive worldview.

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Hannah

5 stars

this book resonated with me like a GONG

I think memoirs can be valuable and enriching for the windows they provide for us to other experiences. especially lately, I've found power in the resonances I feel with queer memoirs specifically - they give me words for emotions I didn't know how to name. this book resonated with me like a GONG and I am so so grateful to the author for sharing her story and for how she crafted this beautiful memoir. this, indeed, helped me name emotions I didn't realize I hadn't processed or knew I was putting off for years. it also opened my eyes to new outlets and avenues for spirituality and spiritual processing - can you believe I bought my first tarot deck just a few weeks before picking this up on a whim? I feel intrigued and excited to continue growing as a queer person, as a former christian, to see new ways of building community and discovering spirituality. I highly recommend this to anyone and everyone but especially queer ex-christians, no matter how long ago your experiences were - I think this will hit you upside the head in the best way.

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Hannah

5 stars

Definitely recommend

Heretic is billed as a memoir, but I'm not sure that quite covers it. Kadlec shares her very personal story of growing up as a fully believing evangelical Christian in the midwest, who gradually becomes disillusioned with the church and god she loved as she realizes that she is queer. But she also did copious amounts of research on the church, the history of evangelicalism, the evolution of the church's pet issues (anti-LGBTQ stance, anti-abortion) and how they're rooted in maintaining white supremacy, and the church's rise to political power. This information is sprinkled throughout her account of her own experiences and she references research in frequent footnotes. Because we know from the jump how this ends - Kadlec leaving the church and coming out as queer, we can see the problems Kadlec faces long before she does as she follows the path set out for her. We can feel outraged when two women take Kadlec aside to tell her she shouldn't give the boys "ideas" by laughing at their jokes or that she needs to keep her shirt and shorts on when swimming because her body will tempt the boys. Kadlec, meanwhile, simply feels ashamed. I thought this book was a very powerful read, and served as a more serious complement to Cameron Esposito's Save Yourself. Both books are written by queer women who had to reckon with the religious upbringing they once loved. Heretic tells the protestant evangelical side to Esposito's Catholic version, but the tales are eerily similar. I loved how Kadlec infused her personal story with the research that she has undertaken as she went through this journey, in her attempt to make sense of her experiences. Definitely recommend.

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Ashley

5 stars

I *did* connect with her words, page after page

As a queer ex-Catholic from New England, I don't share Jeanna Kadlec's exact story. But I *did* connect with her words, page after page. The echo in my heart had me frantically highlighting passages, knowing I'll be desperate to read them again later. This book is honest, empowering, and provides a really nuanced and thoughtful depiction of life after church. I can't help but feel like it's a particularly necessary book for this moment, as well. I was in the middle of this memoir when Roe V. Wade was overturned, and I wanted to shake it at the sky like, yes, see, this is how this happened. This is how this happened. And maybe, maybe, maybe; this is how we take care of each other. Reach for healing. Escape. Dream. Thank you for this book, Jeanna. And for sharing so much of yourself in it. It matters quite a lot, maybe now more than ever.

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Jen

5 stars

this book was written for me

As an ex-evangelical queer woman, this book was written for me. Kadlec bears her soul in such a familiar way. It's healing to have someone live a similar experience and be better for it, much as I have.

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Jennifer Treutle

5 stars

A masterpiece

A must read for all exvangelicals, but particularly the queer ones. A masterpiece.

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Em

5 stars

a beautiful picture of reconstructing a self

I started reading this book the same day I finished Beth Moore’s autobiography, from one pole of Christian experience to the other. Kadlec’s incisive critiques of white evangelicalism ring true, and I found her wide-ranging use of literary theory and criticism in her critique invigorating. I cried at the end of the essay about A-Camp—a beautiful picture of reconstructing a self.

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Valli

5 stars

I wish I'd had access to [it] when I was younger

This is one of those books I wish I'd had access to when I was younger. I appreciate how intimately and honestly the author talks about what it's like to grow up gay in a religious community and the damage it does for years afterwards.

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Victoria

5 stars

absolutely inescapable

I usually bounce between several books at once but with Heretic, I read, laser-focused, until one Tuesday afternoon. After the final sentence, I burst into tears. I have never felt such resonance in grief, fury, and heartache like I did while reading both about her life and also her dissection of evangelical culture, Christianity, and it’s current place in the world. I loved this book so much and would heartily recommend it to anyone who grew up in the church, or lives in a culture influenced by the church which, if you’re American, is absolutely inescapable.

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April

5 stars

I connected with it on so many levels

I devoured this book. It’s part memoir and part commentary on the evangelical culture that permeates our society. I connected with it on so many levels and the author found a way to articulate some of the feelings I’ve had that I’ve struggled to describe. ‘I buried my old self years ago. Do not look for her; she is not there.’

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Holly Hillard

5 stars

This book is a gift, and a challenge

A devastating and generous memoir about growing up in an evangelical, Midwestern family and the author's grief as she wakes up to the painful, discriminatory systems that governed her world. Jeanna Kadlec pushes through the shame of religious trauma to share her experiences with divorce, losing her faith, and coming out as queer. There is so much in this book that is necessary and urgent: how Christian fascism is baked into the DNA of American culture and government, the normalization of all kinds of abuse within religious communities, and how scripture has been twisted to support racism, sexism and homophobia. It is smart and beautiful, tackling its subject matter on micro and macro levels. I did not grow up with organized religion, and my atheist childhood made it hard for me to detect the creeping sexist ideas my ex held about marriage and the role of women, rooted in his Christian worldview. On a personal note, Kadlec's stories of sexual coercion and the pressure to submit to her husband gave me the lens I needed to understand my relationship. "The church teaches that two become one, that marriage is the death of individuals and the birth of a new union. What is the self, then, within an evangelical marriage? A disappearance, an invisible woman." This book is a gift, and a challenge. I find myself wondering if the negative reviews here on Goodreads are a knee-jerk reaction from devoutly religious folks who find its premise personally threatening.

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Ella Dawson

author of BUT HOW ARE YOU, REALLY

5 stars

Forthright, righteous, ambitious, and deeply compassionate memoir

As a fellow Midwestern ex-pat bearing scars from religious trauma, Heretic, Jeanna Kadlec's forthright, righteous, ambitious, and deeply compassionate memoir about unlearning evangelicalism and making one's own community, feels like it was written for me. And while parts of this book resonated with my own experience so much that I exclaimed "WHOA!" a number of times whilst reading, much of what kept engrossed to the last end stop was not where our experiences overlapped, but rather Kadlec's unique, sometimes surprising path towards radical self-love. Judging by the number of reviews of this book by people who clearly haven't read it, Kadlec's unflinching take on the evangelical rot that's been a feature of the US since before its founding and that is currently driving the nation towards fascism has ruffled some feathers. Good. I can't think of a higher compliment for this book than that it enrages Christofascists. A part of me also hopes that in the process of searching for gotcha-takes in the text, some initially hostile readers come to appreciate and learn from the hard-won grace Kadlec extends to her past self, the deep intelligence with which she navigates intersections of identity, privilege, and trauma, and the wit and humor that shine through. Also? Reading Heretic has made me really, really excited to see what Kadlec does next. Whatever it is, I'm confident that it'll be as smart, penetrating, and remarkable as this book is.

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Libby Weber

author of Risk a Verse: A Year in Daily Sonnets

5 stars

...it echoes so much of my own journey

Jeanna Kadlec is a skilled writer who has taken a compelling personal narrative & weaved in theory, academics, & deep understanding of evangelicalism, queerness & spirituality. I loved this book because it echoes so much of my own journey — it made me feel seen & understood. But beyond that, it is brilliant on a craft level. Even if you didn’t leave the church, if you want to understand purity culture/white evangelicalism/the GOP or queerness or tarot or yourself better, this book is for you. What a gift.

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Amy Estes

5 stars

Heartbreaking but hopeful at the same time.

A profoundly moving and honest account of the pain and trauma involvement in and rupture from the evangelical church inflicted on the author. Reading Kadlec's raw pain and hurt was hard at times but the memoir also offers beautiful and insightful musings on queerness, friendship, desire and love. Heartbreaking but hopeful at the same time.

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Fflur Jones

5 stars

I loved every second of this.

Full of passion, heartbreak, and recreating yourself. As a queer woman, I loved every second of this.

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Kara L

5 stars

A must read

A phenomenal and relevant book detailing the harm that Evangelicalism has done and continues to do while lamenting the loss of the community it provided. Kadlec shares deep and personal stories to illustrate a path to self discovery that is as authentic as it is enthralling. The sense of exploration she tells is an inspiration to look deeper into ourselves and how we make sense of the universe. A must read.

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Bryan Roush

5 stars

felt like reading parts of my life

I was raised evangelical so reading this book really felt like reading parts of my life. I loved getting more historical and cultural contexts especially the pervasiveness of evangelical ideals throughout our society. It also felt like a peak of what my life could have been had I not left the church at 18.

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SmutForTwo

5 stars

So well thought out and formulated so raw and vulnerable

I am completely blown away by Jenna’s writing. So well thought out and formulated so raw and vulnerable. Having been raised in a silo mar circumstance in rural Texas, I have never found such a healing story that mirrors so much of my own life experience. I have never been given such tools or language to be able to process what I know now is to be my deconstruction. The author and I began reading tarot around the same time. I had never allowed myself to get deep into the old ways of community, but now as I am getting older and seeing how important it is to be surrounded by love, compassion, and support I have been searching and working towards building many groups of people. My heart is eternally grateful for this writing. For this freedom granted.

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Skylar Hines

5 stars

I wish all evangelicals would read this book

Recovering, jaded, or ex-evangelicals will find much to relate to in Kadlec’s memoir. Beyond that, the introductory chapters lay the groundwork for how American evangelical Christianity has become overwhelmingly white, Republican, and capable of voting for someone like Trump because the ends justify the means. These chapters prove useful for someone outside the evangelical fold that doesn’t understand how evangelicals support the most un-Christian, fraudulent, diabolical politician our nation has ever encountered. I wish all evangelicals would read this book and take a step back to analyze themselves and their true identity and feelings. Like Kadlec, Jesus is still very real to me, but the evangelical churches in this country are not.

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Jon Stanton

5 stars

this book resonated with me so deeply

I don't use Goodreads much anymore (StoryGraph is prettier and isn't owned by Amazon), but this book resonated with me so deeply and so many people don't seem to know about it. Heretic is a thoughtful, beautiful memoir that details Kadlec's journey through her time as an evangelical Christian, her deconstruction of her faith, and her discovery (and embracing of) her queerness. She backs her personal story with history, facts, and analysis that add really interesting additional layers. So much of this book felt true to my own experience, and I'm so grateful this representation exists for all of us queer ex-vangelicals out there.

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Jewell Boyd

5 stars

I will be thinking and feeling this book for long after I turned the final page

One of the most personally moving memoirs I’ve ever read. The journey through and with religious trauma and queerness is a daunting one, but the author articulates her experience with such care and critique that I find so powerful. I’ve underlined more lines in this book than most, namely for putting into words my own conflicting feelings that I’ve long struggled to describe in my time after leaving Christianity. ‘We have resurrected ourselves. We are born again. Our tombs are empty. We are risen.’ I will be thinking and feeling this book for long after I turned the final page. I look forward to rereading and rediscovering more the second time round.

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Nicki Vleisides

5 stars

this book felt real, and urgent, and in many parts beautiful

Heretic has a lot of traits that usually annoy me in memoir: repetitive, sometimes grandiose, sometimes a little fast and loose or just wrong with the facts. And I really don’t love reading details of people’s sex lives. And yet …this book felt real, and urgent, and in many parts beautiful. I both am very far from and in some ways deeply understand Kadlec’s story of leaving her husband, her church, her family, and her God. I don’t know how you’ll react to this book if you identify strongly or not at all. Give it a try and see what you think.

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Ann G. Daniels

5 stars

This memoir is absolutely stunning

5 stars. This memoir is absolutely stunning and beautifully articulates the life of a queer woman raised in the evangelical church. She details the damage it did to her psyche in a way so profound it directly impacted me to excavate my own experiences as a black queer woman in the white evangelical space. Jeanna touched on an array of personal experiences while having an intersectional lense that I deeply appreciated. I highly recommend it to anyone, but especially people with religious trauma or who are curious about its effects.

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Lisa Witcher

5 stars

This book is a love story to all the queers

This book is a love story to all the queers who have been through religious environments that tore them down, and have decided to rebuild themselves inspire of it. I heard about this book on the Gayotic podcast hosted by the band Muna and their guest Lucy Dacus. I was instantly intrigued and picked it up right away, and I am so incredibly glad I did. This may be my new favorite book ever. I laughed, I cried, and I will be thinking about it for weeks to come. I hope whoever needs this book will find it, and know that they are so incredibly loved 🧡

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Erin Rilke

5 stars

this book was everything

this book was everything. my journey from christian fundamentalism is something i am still navigating, and there were so many parts that hit hard

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thel

5 stars

Amazing read

Was debating picking up this book until reading the 1 star "a blame all my issues on my parents and the church read" review, which is irresistible marketing. Disappointed to learn it was not a "blame all my issues on my parents and the church book" but in fact a moving memoir of self discovery that also puts the evangelical movement into historical context. As someone not raised religiously I do admit to being personally called out at several points in the book where Jeanna challenges the assumption that all religious people are uneducated, so I'm glad to have been corrected. Amazing read.

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Meg

5 stars

The audiobook was amazing

I binged this in one day because it's so easy to. The audiobook was amazing. Honestly this does a really good job explaining how evangelism wormed its way into politics and pretty much everything just to push Americans back into very traditional aka oppressive Christian values. I loved her chapter on spirituality being present in her life even after leaving the church and constantly trying to find a way to still be spiritual even when not returning to church. Spirituality is deeper than religion and I loved seeing Jeanna explore that in this book.

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Vic Young

5 stars

Absolutely recommend to anyone wanting to grow their knowledge about dismantling oppressive systems

This is a memoir but also a history lesson. Kadlec weaves her story with the oppressive history of the Evangelical church together MASTERFULLY. Absolutely recommend to anyone wanting to grow their knowledge about dismantling oppressive systems, but please read the trigger warnings the author puts at the beginning of the book. As you can expect with a book about religious trauma, it has some very triggering moments.

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Kristina Wiles

5 stars

This was a wild read

This was a wild read and much of the author’s experiences resonates with mine. In between pages, I recalled talking to a friend about how I think evangelical Christians and Catholics have very similar dogma, that they’d otherwise get along if it weren’t for the whole “Catholics aren’t Christians” stance of many (if not all?) evangelicals. I especially appreciated how non-linear time was in this text as (especially religious) trauma bends time.

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Adryan Corcione

5 stars

This book is a must read for Exvangelicals and anyone going through deconstruction

This book is a must read for Exvangelicals and anyone going through deconstruction. I felt like I was reading my own story half of the time, and it was comforting to know that I'm not alone. She really highlights the grief that comes with losing your identity/faith. Kadlec perfectly balances hard topics with moments of comedic relief. I'm so thankful that she was willing to share her story. Thank you Jeanna, you're a badass powerful queen and I love you!

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Annie White

5 stars

A really interesting mix of personal narrative & social critique

A really interesting mix of personal narrative & social critique. As someone raised Catholic I appreciated the depth of history of the evangelical movement and it’s effects - I was only familiar with it on a more surface level. I’ve read memoirs of people who have left their faith of origin before but this has more context than I had expected.

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Kate Irwin-smiler

5 stars

What a great read!

What a great read! This book is for anyone who grew up in the religious, conservative world and navigating their queerness. I felt the grief of leaving behind (literally) everything to step into your own, the excitement of experiencing queer joy for the first time, and finding the space (if any) for spirituality in your life after religion.

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Carole Louise

5 stars

Fantastic book

Fantastic book. As someone who walked away from the faith on my own while my entire immediate family and most of my extended family are still in it, I sometimes feel soul-crushingly alone and I needed this book. It's so good to know that I'm not the only one living this life. Incredible, relevant book.

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Brannon O'Neal

5 stars

I loveddd this book

Anddd another lucy dacus recommendation. I loveddd this book. As a previous church kid I related to this on sooo many levels. The guilt that plays into it is so real. The way this book was written was giving me Educated (by Tara westover) vibes and I ADORED that book so obviously I loved this too.

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peyton

5 stars

Quick, illuminating memoir

Quick, illuminating memoir of how the evangelical church suppresses everyone except white cis het men. Interesting section delves into the interpretation of the Constitution and how it has been influenced by Christianity and interpreting the Bible to benefit this same narrow group.

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Trista

5 stars

This memoir was triggering and healing all at once

This memoir was triggering and healing all at once. It was easy to resonate with this story and seeing Kadlec’s journey out of organized religion to accepting herself and finding happiness as a queer woman left me feeling so hopeful. I can’t recommend this enough.

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Nicole Drew

5 stars

Heretic sets the bar for every memoir I read after this

Just finished this book and instantly reached for my phone. Heretic sets the bar for every memoir I read after this. Truly fantastic. A mix of history, sociology, witty anecdotes, and self-reflection, I couldn’t ask for anything better.

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abi struthers

5 stars

such great slice-of-life writing

I loved the memoir bits of this so much, such great slice-of-life writing, dabbled with lines and paragraphs that were practically poetry. Chapter 6, F/F, was my favorite, having been raised in fandom as well.

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Valerie Anne

5 stars

and so so heartbreaking

beautiful and so so heartbreaking. Kadlec does a beautiful job entwining her own stories of growing up in the church and coming out as queer with truths regarding christian fundamentalism and american politics. Highly highly recommend.

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Maggie Loughnane

5 stars

Written with energy

Written with energy and lots of religious and historical contextualization, this book is a prime example that what the reader brings to the text may well determine what they get out of it.

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Robin

5 stars

Fav book of the year so far.

It's so nice to be seen ... great read. Fav book of the year so far.

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Idalis

5 stars

I couldn’t put it down

So many times throughout this book I thought “me too”. It laid out a story so similar to my life’s story that I couldn’t put it down.

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Brynna

5 stars

If I could get the whole last chapter tattooed, I would.

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Louise Clark

5 stars

I know what to write, how to write it, and why

Jeanna’s class was so helpful to provide insight and self awareness not only as a person who aspires to write, but also as a human being who needs to function in a world founded on sharing words with others. I am now in a love affair with my birth chart and my multi-faceted creative process. I know what to write, how to write it, and why I need to do so. I now have words on paper.

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Nicole K.

5 stars

Jeanna is a thoughtful and generous teacher

Jeanna is a thoughtful and generous teacher and an astrologer steadfast in her commitment to rigorous self-examination and loving acceptance of whatever it is you uncover. Her course helped me reconnect with the writer within and will shape my work for years to come.

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Eleanor Cummins

5 stars

For me, this class was a permission slip, a challenge, and an invitation

This class! Jeanna is an excellent teacher who organizes information in a way that’s accessible and thought provoking. I came away from every lesson with a new understanding of my chart and my creative work. For me, this class was a permission slip, a challenge, and an invitation to use the realities of who I am and how I work to make my writing life work for me.

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Chelsee B.

5 stars

I gained clarity on my purpose as a writer

After taking Jeanna’s course, I gained clarity on my purpose as a writer as well as the confidence to pursue it. However, the most fulfilling thing that I walked away with was a deep sense of compassion, acceptance, and self-love for the unique process I need and have to write my best work. In all honesty, every writer, no matter where they are in their career, should make the time to take this class with Jeanna. It is THAT remarkable.

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Luna Damiana

5 stars

Jeanna is a wonderful teacher

This class helped me to consider what is most essential to me as a writer and gave me more avenues to connect my writing and magical practices. It’s helped me to regain my writing momentum in some very foundational ways. Jeanna is a wonderful teacher. Her class is inclusive, thoughtful, and filled with ideas, inspirations, and further resources. It was a truly magical experience!

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Miranda Schmidt

5 stars

I would recommend this class to anyone

Jeanna’s expertise in and passion for astrology and writing are undeniable. The knowledge I gained in this class allowed me to shed preconceived notions of what I was supposed to be doing as a writer and really embrace what would work best for me based on my astrology. Jeanna gave me insights into my chart that I honestly don’t think I would have gotten anywhere else. I would recommend this class to anyone who is struggling with how to make a writing life that makes sense for them.

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Tarah Ruff

5 stars

I feel free to relax into the writing life I was born for

Jeanna’s class gave me permission to write about the things I feel compelled to write about in the way that feels natural to me. I no longer feel embarrassed about not having the same process all writers are “supposed to” have. I feel free to relax into the writing life I was born for, and that is an incredible gift.

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Becky Bullard

5 stars

Jeanna’s class affirmed my passion for writing, storytelling, and astrology

Jeanna’s class affirmed my passion for writing, storytelling, and astrology and I’m so glad I took it. The work I’ve done in this class has prompted invaluable and critical self-reflection on my life as a writer. Jeanna’s expertise and guidance have helped me to feel more confident in my voice, and more unafraid of speaking my truth.

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Roslyn Talusan

5 stars

I come back to this class all the time

I come back to this class all the time. Jeanna's explanations of everything — from house to sign to planet to aspect — are so clear and distilled that I can count on gaining meaning whenever I'm looking at a new chart or studying an aspect of my own. Her metaphors for the signs through the seasons are a core part of how I understand and apply them.

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Melissa L.

songwriter and game facilitator

5 stars

Jeanna's class was really helpful

Jeanna's class was really helpful in terms of helping me realize not just when and how my writing happened, but also that there was no moral valence or certain writing that counted "more" than others as I was creating my writing routine and life of a writer. Writing in my journal counts, notes on what I'm reading counts, essays count, working on my book counts—it's all writing that goes towards making me a writer with a practice.

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Alejandra Oliva

author of Rivermouth

media, interviews & writing

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