This is more of a 2.5, but the ending annoyed me enough to bump downward. It's not an altogether bad little book, it just doesn't give good info that can't be obtained more cleanly elsewhere, and it's got a lot of wackiness to wade through to find it. I can't for the life of me figure out why the author associates runes with the Zodiac and tarot cards. There are some commonalities across divination systems, but they don't slot neatly with each other (or why would even need more than one?) and you have to stretch to the point of ridiculousness to make some of the associations she makes. 'Runic Kabbala' is frustratingly absurd. Just because Yggdrasil and the Tree of Life are both ... um....trees.....does not mean that there is anything resembling a Runic Kabbala. Ever. Another howler is 'To the Vikings, the blank rune was more than ever Odin's rune, as he was the god who dictated man's fate.' Okay. But Wyrd didn't exist in Viking times, so, sorry, but no. The book winds up with 'A Note of Caution' that first tells the reader that if they don't know everything there is to know before they attempt to use the runes, devastation will ensue, and gives a simplistic 'Nordic saga' to illustrate the point. So, here's the information to use this divinatory and spiritual growth system, but don't use it until you know everything about it, even though you can't learn anything about it until you use it. And I just can't with 'Some people will not feel happy with the runes; some will.'
Okay, I've talked myself into feeling this is really a 1.5.
There are so many better rune books out there. This one's going into the donate pile.