AUTHOR'S NOTE: When I buy a new tarot book after casually researching it, I trust that the contents will provide insights to inspire my own writing. Although it has its merits in that regard due to fostering a couple of my recent essays, Lon Milo DuQuette's Tarot Architect didn't quite measure up overall. Knowing DuQuette's … Continue reading Tarot Architect: A Book Review
Tarot Books
Reversed Fours: A Stumble and A “One-Point Landing”
AUTHORS NOTE: Having finished re-reading 54 Devils, Cory Hutcheson's playing-card divination book, and not yet possessed of a new tarot book, I picked up my interrupted reassessment of Paul Fenton-Smith's Tarot Master Class (which I believe has now been renamed). In it he mentions that the 4 of Wands reversed can indicate a "lack of … Continue reading Reversed Fours: A Stumble and A “One-Point Landing”
The Self-Referential Diviner: Depth and Dependability or Merely Self-Flattery?
AUTHOR'S NOTE: Novice tarot readers are typically told by mentors that they will eventually shelve the guide-books and bypass the social-media "talking heads" to follow their own star when it comes to card meanings and situational applications. This is wise but not entirely incontestable counsel. As a longtime diviner (over five decades of tarot reading … Continue reading The Self-Referential Diviner: Depth and Dependability or Merely Self-Flattery?
The Problem with Tarot Books
AUTHOR'S NOTE: I appreciate well-written tarot books of all kinds. They keep me sharp and constantly thinking about the state of the diviner's art. But I'm a seasoned card-reader with five decades of tarot prediction under my belt, and I've sifted through reams of BS in the published literature since 1972 so I'm not likely … Continue reading The Problem with Tarot Books
Guest Essay: “A Journey Through the Tarot” by Hannah Troyer
PUBLISHER'S NOTE: I was recently approached about contributing to the promotion of a forthcoming tarot book by Hannah Troyer (currently digital, to be released in a printed edition on September 12, 2024). It was proposed that I might publish a guest article by Hannah so she can tell her own story, and I agreed. Here … Continue reading Guest Essay: “A Journey Through the Tarot” by Hannah Troyer
Tarot and the “Virtues”
AUTHOR'S NOTE: Reading Ronald Decker's occult tarot history book, The Esoteric Tarot . . . etc, has put me into "intellectual overdrive." Here I'm reflecting on his discussion of the "Virtues" - both the four Platonic originals and the three "theological" additions of Christianity - in which he explores their relationship to the Major Arcana … Continue reading Tarot and the “Virtues”
Connecting Sky and Earth
AUTHOR'S NOTE: In his book on the history of the occult tarot (The Esoteric Tarot: Ancient Sources Rediscovered in Hermeticism and Cabalah), Ronald Decker ventures into astrological symbolism as it may have appeared in some of the early decks. In his discussion of the traditional planetary deities he cites a passage from the magical tome … Continue reading Connecting Sky and Earth
The Polysemous Tarot: A Symphony of Meanings
AUTHOR'S NOTE: Although I may regret it from the standpoint of intellectual overload (and so might my readers), I've just begun digesting (you don't idly graze these things) Ronald Decker's scholarly study of occult tarot history, The Esoteric Tarot: Ancient Sources Rediscovered in Hermeticism and Cabalah, in the introduction to which he acknowledges that he … Continue reading The Polysemous Tarot: A Symphony of Meanings
A Case for Tarot Divination (with Insights on Self-Reading)
AUTHOR'S NOTE: While reading Michael Snuffin's The Thoth Companion, I encountered one of the most lucid explanations of the goals and methods as well as the advantages of performing divination with the tarot cards that I have ever seen in print. I'm summarizing it here since so much of it agrees with my own beliefs. … Continue reading A Case for Tarot Divination (with Insights on Self-Reading)
The Thoth Companion: A Brief Critique
AUTHOR'S NOTE: At this point I've penetrated deeply enough into my Kindle edition of Michael Snuffin's book, The Thoth Companion, to attempt a critical review. In general, I find it to be well written and largely true to its aim of being a "companion work," but it errs a bit on the side of brevity … Continue reading The Thoth Companion: A Brief Critique