Rose McGowan, who played a witch in the supernatural TV series “Charmed” on the WB network, is writing the foreword for “Pop Magick: A Simple Guide to Bending Your Reality,” which explores the real-life world of witchcraft as practiced by its 25-year-old author, Alex Kazemi.

“Magick is the art of utilizing natural forces around us to bring about change,” McGowan writes. “I stand for change. That’s what this book does. It brings change — change of thought, change of action, change of spirit.”

“The book debunks magick/witchcraft’s association with selling your soul to the devil or casting spells on people,” said Kazemi, whose day job is running the creative agency Void Collective. “It’s about self-love, self-preservation, helping others, through magick.” Kazemi scored a mid-five-figure advance.

“This is a subject that has been bubbling up in this generation for the past few years,” said Jacob Hoye, the creative director of publisher Permuted Press, an imprint that was acquired by Post Hill Press, headed by Anthony Ziccardi, the former editorial director of Simon & Schuster conservative imprint Threshold Press. “It’s a lot for an independent publisher and a first-time author.” Hoye noted that plans are for a 25,000 first printing in February.