Renowned author Rachel Pollack has spent more than forty years studying and practicing Tarot. This insightful guide distills her vast knowledge and offers a direct, accessible approach to mastering the cards.
This book will teach you the meanings of the cards and enable you to begin doing compelling readings right away. More seasoned readers will find that this basic reference has a richness and depth that will call you back again and again to discover your own truth within the cards.
Find new descriptions and divinatory meanings with a modern twist Learn not only what each card signifies, but how to discover what it means to you Enhance your understanding of the cards with information about numbers, elements, astrology, and Kabbalah Try the unique spreads inspired by each Major Arcana card Understand Tarot's rich history, including Eden Gray's immense influence
Rachel Grace Pollack was an American science fiction author, comic book writer, and expert on divinatory tarot. Pollack was a great influence on the women's spirituality movement.
Pollack is one of the seminal sources on tarot; if you're interested in learning more about the cards than the pamphlet that came with your deck provides, this is an excellent place to start. Pollack has another text--Seventy Eight Degrees of Wisdom--which is probably the tarot book of the 20th century, and this is a sort of shorter version. It's not a revision, or an update, or a diluted introduction to the other text--it stands well on its own, and both can be used together. But of the two, this is the more approachable.
The thing about tarot is that each deck has a slightly different configuration, and the cards can have different meanings depending on the artist's interpretations. Pollack here chooses to go with the Waite-Smith deck, the "basic" tarot deck that most newcomers will be familiar with. It's the place to start, and provides all the basic symbolism to get you started. Personally, I'm not a fan of that deck--but this book is still enormously helpful in describing the cards, and what you learn can easily be transferred to other decks.
The second thing about tarot is that it relies more on the reader's intuition and interpretation of the cards than on codified meanings for them. Pollack knows this, and describes the cards in terms of encompassing symbolism; she gives you a place to start, but there's enough wiggle room that one card can be interpreted in different ways depending on how it shows up in a spread, and what the question is. Many tarot books border on useless because they insist they describe the "true meanings;" this book has no such pretension.
The layout of the book is simple. After an introduction and some basic explanations of the tarot in general, there's an in depth description of all 78 cards. Some layouts finish off the book. There's no attempt to tell the history of tarot, the complications arising between different decks, or hints at esoteric knowledge you'll only get after buying more books. Just good, solid information you can really use, presented in a friendly and comprehensive manner. Definitely recommended: anyone with an interest in studying the tarot should have this book in their library.
Let me just preface this review by saying that I don't at all doubt Pollack's knowledge of the tarot. I have read her more cumbersome book, Tarot Wisdom, and it is my favorite book on the tarot to date. This seemed like an effort to cut the fat out of that book and be a more to-the-point reference, but I don't think Pollack effectively sorted out what was excess and what was going to help readers understand the cards more. I felt the entire section on the Major Arcana was only worth skimming, she focuses too much on symbolism she finds in the math of the numbers of the cards (much of these examples I find to be stretches and linked to things that are not terribly relevant.) The symbolism in the imagery is also very specific to the Rider deck, so if you do not use the Rider (I don't) you'll find what Pollack has rendered important to be less so. She doesn't really discuss the meanings of the cards as a whole outside of her decided key words at the end of each card's description. I finished this book feeling like it didn't really have to be written, and I would highly recommend her other effort, Tarot Wisdom, over this one.
Ms. Pollack brings forty-plus years of experience with the Tarot to this book and it shows in her detailed explanations. In addition to her own experience, she follows the background originally put forth in the Eden Grey book “The Tarot Revealed”. In this book, Rachel describes the classic Rider-Waite deck – its history, the symbolism embedded in each card, its importance and the divination aspects. She does it clearly with explanations that anyone can follow and understand. Although the explanations can be applied to any deck, the symbols found in the Waite deck may not be the same in other decks.
Rachel starts with the twenty-two cards of the major arcana – going from The Fool through The World. According to her, these cards represent the journey the Fool takes. Each description she gives grows “naturally out of the cards’ images, stories and spiritual wonders…” This particular ARC did not have any pictures, but I’m hoping the finished book will have pictorial examples of the cards. If not, you should have a deck handy to look at as you read the explanations.
The minor cards consist of four suits – Cups, Pentacles, Swords, and Wands. Each suit has fourteen cards – ten numbered and four court cards. She explains each one and what each means and how it corresponds to elements and more. The last chapter explains spreads, how to handle the cards and, that the only rule you need to follow is to do what works for you with the cards.
This was an easy-to-read, easy-to-understand book that I highly recommend to anyone who is thinking about getting into Tarot. It’s also good for those who have been reading for some time as a refresher, or even just an interesting read. Definitely recommended.
Quite clear, really gets into the RWS symbolism. For some of the minors the introductory paragraph can feel a little too abstract, but the summary under the sections for "Divinatory Meanings" and "Reversed" has the gist of it and I usually skip to that part. There were some meanings I hadn't considered before, but make sense. Good section on the court cards, the author gives a "theme" for each one. I feel like I got to know their personalities better.
Recommended for beginners. This beats my previous top rec of Tarot Plain and Simple (Anthony Louis), which can be a little too much info. This one gets to the point quickly, good for when you don't have a lot of time.
Maybe, and especially for someone who knows tarot better than I do, this isn't the best book out there, but it certainly is well-formatted and easy to understand! For a beginner especially, I highly recommend this book and think I'd even cite it as a must-have if you're beginning from point zero.
It is, like all the books from Llewellyn that I've read so far, written in a humble, unassuming way that seeks to be informative but not to impose anything on anyone. That's what I like: choice and freedom to self-educate with informative background sources for help.
The illustrations in the book are also very helpful, beautiful, and well-explained, enough to communicate the meanings of the cards even if you won't be using the Rider-Waite tarot deck.
I understand that Ms. Pollack has a much bigger book that is considered to be the essential one of tarot studies. Well, after going through this beauty here, I think I just may take her up on that offer. Getting more and more excited in anticipation of getting my own special deck a la Kickstarter when it finally gets around to shipping.
Really looking forward to studying tarot and divination and improving on my own skills. Really good starting points and a super easy read!
I have the deepest respect for Rachel Pollack as an author and tarologist. Nevertheless, I found this particular book to be a little mediocre. It simplified and rephrased material that Ms. Pollack has covered before and which can be found on an almost mindless number of tarot books and websites. This is a very RWS-based book and pretty good as an introduction to esoteric tarot. The copy I read was borrowed from a library and I don't think I'll be purchasing a copy for my personal library to serve as future reference material.
This is just a cliff's notes version of her book Tarot Wisdom (which I do love). I would have liked it more if it felt like a quick reference, but everything she said related only to the RWS deck and half of the information was numerology or Kabbalah, neither of which I'm interested in.
I would love to see her use all of her knowledge and experience to talk about the universality of the cards instead of focusing once again on Smith's art. At the end of the day the RWS deck is a deck full of cis white people and I'd like some more inclusivity.
i have only been reading tarot for a year or so, and i wanted to learn more about the mystical meanings of the cards’ images and this was a great reading option. Some connections seem circumstantial, but appeared to be overall well researched. Very easy read as it was well organized and language was engaging. The authors passion is so clear. Will definitely be including the considerations from this book in my next readings.
2) To get card reading at end of each chapter, Use this CustomGPT: https://chat.openai.com/g/g-OQaRyWWjm... Give it a command: ‘use your magical algorithm to answer the following questions’ and copy-paste the questions at the end of the chapter.
I skimmed through this book to see what Tarot was about and why it endures and I like the way the author explained it and while I don’t really know anything about Tarot, (aside from what I just read here) I found this book very eloquent, helpful and well written.
Pretty good, but card descriptions are inconsistent, and there are off-the-cuff interpretations of some cards that might confuse the novice reader more than help them (the Tower = crowing of a baby, anyone?).
A great tarot book for beginner or a quick reference for experienced Tarot readers. Very condensed information and easy to use. I would highly recommend it.
I have been studying the work of Rachel Pollack for over a decade and I love the simplicity of her teachings and how easy it is to implement her ideas.
I felt some of the RWS meanings were way off. I got this book on sale and because everyone recommended this author. I wasn't really impressed. Maybe the original book was better?
The New Tarot Handbook breaks down all 78 tarot cards using the imagery of the Rider-Waite-Smith tarot deck, the most well-known deck to ever exist and the foundation for the majority of decks that exist today.
Rachel Pollack is world-renowned tarot expert and she discusses not only keywords but themes, elements, upright and reversed meaning. She also goes in-depth concerning the imagery and how that can help you interpret each card. As a special bonus, each Major Arcana card also has a spread inspired by it, which can also serves to help when leaning the cards as well as how you may relate to them.
The Minor Arcana is split into two sections, just as with most tarot books: ace through ten for each of the four suits, followed by the court cards for each suit (page, knight, queen, king). There is also discussion concerning spreads, though this isn't touched on too much, as well as a small section at the back that lists more books for further reading.
I decided to give this book 3 stars. Ideally, it is worthy of 4 stars, but I chose to drop it due to how the book was formatted. The formatting works for fiction, but not so much for a non-fiction book such as this. It made it difficult for me to learn and remember what I read. Which is a shame, 'cause this is truly a good book that deserves to be in more hands.
Rachel Pollack knows lots (and lots and lots) about the Tarot. So I read this book mainly to see what of all she knows she would choose to include in a Tarot book for beginners. While her keywords and definitions will work for most RWS-based decks, she discusses the symbolism on each card at some length and what she's discussing are the pictures on the Rider-Waite-Smith deck itself, not necessarily even its closest clones.
I think this is a fine book for beginners and advanced practitioners both. For beginners, Pollack keeps the keywords and definitions at a manageable, non-intimidating length. She includes the basics of numerology and the four elements, and adds a dash of the Kabbalah, but that's it for other systems: no overwhelming beginners with astrology or a crash course in the Hebrew alphabet. However, even though these are "basic" definitions, I found new insights in both her keywords and her writings on the symbolism of each card, so I think intermediate and advanced readers will find the book good too. I thought it was a little dry for reading cover to cover, but it will be excellent for looking up cards.
One thing I love about this book is its discussion of tarot symbolism and their origins. I do feel that after the sword suit, the descriptions get a little bit vague and non-specific. I had to look up additional explanations of the card to understand the card. Other than that, the layout gives me lots of room to make notes. I don't usually write on books, but I planned to use this copy as a reference/note book from the beginning, so that worked out pretty well. Anyway. It's a pretty good intro tarot card book, as it does not emphasize rigid rituals or procedures, but focuses more on intuitive comprehension and insights.
An excellent book for all levels of readers. Clear and concise interpretations which leave room for your own intuition, Pollack's book opens the door of tarot to all. I loved this book and still consult it from time to time. The readings for each suit and major arcana card are especially useful and interesting. A great addition to any readers bookshelf.
There are few who stand as accomplished in the Tarot field as Rachel Pollack. She continuously amazes me by seeing new things the the 78 cards which make up a tarot deck. Although I have read this, its the kind of book I know I will refer to again and again.