Brigit Esselmont’s The Ultimate Guide to Tarot Card Meanings might be popular, but I found it to be more of a letdown than the essential guide it claims to be. The book is definitely comprehensive—there’s no shortage of information on every card, both upright and reversed—but it reads more like a dry reference manual than a truly insightful exploration of Tarot. If you’re just looking for keywords and basic meanings, it might do the trick. But if you want something that actually deepens your understanding of the cards or sparks a more intuitive connection, you’re going to come away disappointed.
The biggest issue is that the content feels almost too formulaic. Each card gets a detailed breakdown of various aspects like relationships, career, and well-being, but it’s all very compartmentalized and repetitive. There’s no real flow or sense of personality to the interpretations—just a laundry list of meanings that feel pulled from generic sources rather than anything rooted in deeper wisdom or experience. By the time I’d read through a handful of cards, it felt like I was just skimming a thesaurus for Tarot, rather than engaging with the symbolism and energy of the deck.
I also found the book’s “modern” approach to be more superficial than refreshing. The interpretations are straightforward and practical, but they lack the richness and nuance that make Tarot such a powerful tool for insight. It’s as if the cards are being boiled down to their most mundane aspects, stripped of their mystery and spiritual depth. Sure, it’s accessible, but it’s also flat—there’s nothing here that truly inspires or challenges the reader to think beyond the surface level.
The journaling prompts and keyword charts are useful for beginners, but they’re presented in such a textbook manner that it’s hard to get excited about using them. I expected more creativity and insight from a book with “Ultimate Guide” in its title, but instead, it’s just more of the same keywords and basic interpretations that you can find for free on any Tarot website. For something marketed as a must-have, it feels oddly lacking in originality.
The Ultimate Guide to Tarot Card Meanings might be fine if you need a quick reference book to have on hand, but it’s hardly the groundbreaking or inspiring text it’s made out to be. If you’re serious about deepening your practice or finding a guide that really connects the dots, you’ll want to look elsewhere. This one is more of a collection of surface-level meanings, dressed up with a lot of marketing language, than a true guide to the complexities of the Tarot. Save your money for a book that actually respects the cards and challenges you to see them as more than just a list of predefined meanings.