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E**C
Holistic Tarot is perfect for me and I love the companion course on her website.
I started getting into tarot about February of this past year. I have been using several websites, including the author's, to learn about the tarot and it was going fairly well. However, I am a fairly methodical person and like a very structured, more academic approach, to learning things. Once I saw Wen's companion course on her website, I ordered the book. It was exactly what I wanted. She is very methodical and structured in her approach to learning tarot. I love her appendix and endnotes. When she makes a statement, be assured that it was thoroughly researched. This is not a book you just read through. It is a book that you use a highlighter with, use page markers, take notes on, buy other books, and could probably launch an entire thesis off of for a PhD program, just saying... Please don't get the wrong idea though, all of that is optional and her book isn't stuffy in the least, it's just not a "sitting at your neighbor's table throwing down the cards" sort of style. While I enjoy all of the woo-woo stuff associated with tarot, I didn't want it to interfere with learning the tarot. Wen has removed all the mystical stuff and has provided a distilled version of tarot so that after you have a very solid understanding of the tarot, you are free to use it however you want and she encourages you to do so. Her analogy to learning the violin is exactly what she provides in Holistic Tarot. That being said, I don't think this book is perfect for everyone. I started with Biddy Tarot's website and it helped me feel like I couldn't mess things up. Once I got comfortable, it just wasn't enough and Wen's approach was exactly what I needed. If you are all about intuition, you didn't enjoy school, you hate journaling/recording things, etc., then I would probably recommend looking elsewhere. It's not that you wouldn't understand her work, it's just that you probably wouldn't enjoy the process and that kind of defeats the purpose of learning tarot, in my opinion.Things I particularly like: she touches briefly on the history of tarot and then recommends other authors to pursue to further develop your understanding of how tarot developed and why it is still relevant. I appreciated this because I have since paused in the companion course and am reading a few other books on the history of tarot that are definitely drawing on the art history and history classes I took in college, making this a thoroughly enjoyable research experience for me. I like that she includes planetary references, numerology, elements, and a whole bunch of other things to create a complete rabbit hole experience that will keep me occupied for months. I had forgotten how much I had enjoyed the research aspect of being at university and this has just made me completely happy. I have expanded on the journal template she provides in the companion course and downloaded Xotero to organize my notes and other books I'm using as references while I read hers. I like that the companion course really breaks the book down into buildable chunks so that it isn't overwhelming when you receive this massive tome at your front door because it certainly isn't fitting in your mailbox. She genuinely covers everything.For those of you who do want to incorporate tarot into Craft, I would recommend checking out her online courses. She does offer a course that deals with using tarot for Craft that is inexpensive and goes in a completely different direction than her book.Bottom line: if you genuinely are interested in getting a solid understanding of the tarot AND like structure, then do not hesitate to purchase this book.
M**Y
The best, most comprehensive book you can get
I am relatively new to tarot, having used the Zen tarot cards for myself for some years, but the Rider Waite deck not as often. As a professional dowser, I have many interests in intuitive techniques. I always wanted to learn to use tarot better, so I purchased this book. I am an information junkie and very analytical, although also very intuitive. This book is just what I needed. Some people might find it overwhelming, but just do one chapter at a time and take it slow. I've gotten through about 1/4 of the book at this point. I have not read straight through, but mostly. I have consulted the appendices and found the numerology summaries for Life Paths to be more useful to me than those in a book I have on Numerology. It's like you get these little surprise gifts as you go through the book.This book includes lots of useful information for practitioners who intend to read for others. I think if you ever intend to read for others, you must learn ethics, how to present what you've 'seen' in the cards and develop your intuition as fully as possible, since intuition is a key to reading. This book will help you do all those things. She also includes suggestions about things that aren't tarot, but will help you, like different meditation techniques and why she recommends them.I love the detailed explanations for the cards both upright and reversed. I'm not yet confident enough to read cards reversed, so for now, I'm sticking with all cards being upright. But she gives detailed meanings for reversed cards.The only thing so far that I haven't been able to find, and maybe it's me just missing it, is how you get reversed cards in the deck in the first place. She tells you about dealing and preparing yourself for a reading and all kinds of other practices, even cutting cards, but I can't find how you introduce a certain number of cards in reversed position. In fact, I haven't really found anything useful on that topic online or in the other book I have. It would seem to me that it matters which cards are reversed. For example, a Three Aces spread relies on mainly the aces, and it matters whether they are upright or reversed, yet I can't find how she says to compose the deck to make sure all your aces aren't one way or the other. I imagine it doesn't matter that much, but it's a lingering question I have. That said, it's the only thing I have been able to think of that she doesn't answer in detail. And I may just be overlooking it. It's a minor thing.This book is the one book I'd get if I only got one book on tarot. It will take me years to fully learn everything she teaches. If you are not an information junkie, or you are easily overwhelmed by deep, analytical explanations, maybe this isn't a good starting point for you. But it seems to me that in any skill or technique like this, if you want to master it, at some point you have to dive in deeply, think deeply and practice seriously. This book is not only loaded with the basic information you need to start using tarot for self-improvement; it has everything you need if you intend to master it completely.I have plans to order her I Ching book which comes out in 2023, because I am sure it will be equally complete and useful. I give this book my highest recommendation, and I have written over 20 books with my husband on dowsing and intuitive techniques, so I have experience teaching and presenting information and have experience in evaluating books like this. I'd be really proud if this were my book. It's a major accomplishment.
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