List of female witches and sorceresses in SF
- Bradley, Marion Zimmer. Witch Hill
- The Mists of Avalon
- Galford, Ellen. The Fires of Bride
- Hand, Elizabeth. Waking the Moon.
- Jakober, Marie. The Black Chalice (2000)
- Joyce, Graham. Dark Sister (1999) [suburban housewife becomes a witch]
- Kerr, Peg. The Wild Swans (1999) - AIDS story & retelling of old fairy tale. With real witches, and real witch-hunts, although not of real witches.
- Kwasny, Melissa. Modern Daughters and the Outlaw West (Spinsters Book, San Francisco, 1990). A small Wyoming town is infested with quirky lesbians, ghosts, and politics. The witchery is subtle, practical, perhaps even spiritual ... Although it does break out into the open occasionally.
- Lieber, Fritz. Conjure Wife (1943) (Secret society of, well, probably all women, are witches who really determine the success or failure of the men. Creepy & well-written.)
- Maguire, Gregory. Wicked (Oz retelling)
- Ore, Rebecca. Slow Funeral
- Pollack, Rachel. Godmother Night
- Rice, Anne. The Witching Hour
- Rivers, Diana. Daughters of the Great Star.
- The Hadra
- Turk, H. C. Black Body
- Updike, John. The Witches of Eastwick. I wouldn't really call this feminist per se, but it's lots of fun and there are memorable female characters who are sexual beings and have some feminist concerns.
- Warner, Sylvia Townsend, 1893-1978. Lolly Willowes or, The Loving Huntsman (1925) - a middle-aged English spinster accepts Satan in this amusing and engrossing work ... Highly recommended. -- lq, 1999
Anthologies
- Shahrukh Husain, editor. Daughters of the Moon: Witch Tales From Around the World. (illustrated by Liane Payne). Boston, London: Faber & Faber, 1993.
- Susan M. Shwartz, editor. Hecate's Cauldron
Movies
Many, many movies. But a few notable ones:
- "Bell Book and Candle" (1958) Kim Novak & her family are Manhattan witches. "Bewitched" the TV series took a lot of cues from this story initially.
- "The Witches of Eastwick" (1987) with an excellent cast (Susan Sarandon, Michelle Pfeiffer, Cher, Veronica Cartwright, and Jack Nicholson as, perhaps, the Devil).
- "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" (1997-2003 TV series) -- numerous witches, particularly Willow and Tara.
Others, Not Especially Feminist
- Daley, Brian. The Doomfarers of Coramande and sequel - a kick-ass sorceress
- Eddings, David. The Belgariad series: Polgara