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Power Tarot: A Review An expanded review by Randall Sapphire |
Authors: Trish MacGregor and Phyllis Vega
Trade Paperback, 288 pages
Publisher: Fireside Books
Publication date: June 1998
ISBN: 0684841851
Current Price: Click for info
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I haven't been this pleased with a new Tarot book since Mary K. Greer's Tarot For Your Self came out in the mid-eighties.
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Power Tarot is co-written by a friend and member of The Cauldron, Phyllis Vega. This
connection makes it a hard book to review fairly. This is especially true as it is one of
the better new books on the Tarot I've seen recently.
As one might expect in a Tarot book designed for mass market appeal, a good portion of
the book is taken up with suggested interpretations of the cards. MacGregor and Vega
simplify things a bit by ignoring reversed meanings. This is a good idea as even without
reversed interpretations about a page and a half is devoted the interpretation of each card.
A general interpretation and interpretations for specific types of readings (relating to
work, romance, finances, health, spirituality, and empowerment) are given for every card.
The court cards, which are often glossed over with interpretations like "a powerful man" in
other books, are given the same full treatment as the other cards in Power Tarot. As
I've always had trouble interpreting the court cards when interpreting them as a person just
doesn't make sense, this alone made Power Tarot a welcome addition to my library.
For example, Eden Gray's A Complete Guide to the Tarot gives the following meaning
for the Knight of Cups:
A young man who is graceful, poetic, but indolent. He is a dreamer of sensual
delights. Can mean the bringer of a message, a proposition, an invitation.
This often is not very helpful if a person simply does not make sense in a reading.
While Phyllis and Trish do give a description of the card as a person, they also give a
number of possible meanings that do not strongly imply a person. For example, here is the
meaning they give for the Knight of Cups in a general situation:
A new kind of experience moves into your life. It buoys your spirits, stirs
your compassion, and changes your beliefs about what is possible. This knight symbolizes
the path with heart. Your tensions and loneliness ease as your emotions find an equilibrium
that has been absent in recent months.
The most interesting part of the book, however, is the one hundred Tarot spreads. Most
of these spreads are original. They range from one card spreads to twenty-four card spreads.
While a few do look like they were created just to round off the collection to 100, most are
interesting and might be useful to answer specific types of questions. I haven't had time to
try all of them, but several of these new spreads have already become favorites of mine: the
Desire spread, the Ladle spread, and the Treasure Chest spread. The only problem with this
section is that the explanations of various positions in each spread are often a bit
sketchy. While this is not a problem for more experienced readers, it might be a bit of a
problem for less experienced readers.
They did leave out one interesting spread I was taught years ago. I call it the "Who is
it?" spread and use it as a "sub-spread" when the main spread is clearly indicating a
person, but I have no strong sense of who that person might be. It can also be used as an
quick spread by itself to find out something about the nature of a person you wish to know
more about. It's a three card spread. The first card is the person's inner or true self,
that which she really is. Card two is the person's outer shell, the face they expose to the
world. The final card represents the person's surroundings, his place in the world around
him.
Overall, Power Tarot is an excellent addition to the bookshelves of anyone
interested in the Tarot. I haven't been this pleased with a new Tarot book since Mary K.
Greer's Tarot For Your Self came out in the mid-eighties. When you see it in your
bookstore, be sure to take a look.
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