Cartomancy with the Lenormand and the Tarot: Create Meaning & Gain Insight from the Cards

by Patrick Dunn

Ebook, 2013

Status

Available

Call number

133.3

Collection

Publication

Llewellyn Publications (2013), 290 pages

Description

Beyond Divination Looking for deeper meaning in the cards? Learn how to combine the little-known Lenormand deck with the tarot for richer, more personal readings. An expert in symbolic language, author Patrick Dunn describes how the symbolism of the Lenormand, so accessible and simple, can shine a clear light on the tarot, while the cosmology and philosophy of the tarot can lend depth and meaning to the Lenormand. Focusing on experimentation and instinct, Cartomancy with the Lenormand and the Tarotshows how to create relationships with these important divinatory systems. With personal stories, applied theory, and how-to instructions, you will discover how the symbols of the decks interact and learn how to read intuitively. Working with the Lenormand and the tarot, you can collaborate with the Universal Mind and enhance your meditative and magical work for life-changing results.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member Silvernfire
At this point, there aren't that many books in English about Lenormand divination, so it would be reasonable to expect that the few books that do exist would focus on the basics of Lenormand and how to get started. Many of them do just that, but that's not this book's strength, and I can't
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recommend it as your Very First Lenormand Book. Dunn is forthright about that, saying that this is "only secondarily a how-to book," but it's not that obvious from the cover and the book description.

This book is intended for a reader who is familiar with the tarot, but not with Lenormand. It's mainly about Lenormand and secondarily about the Major Arcana (there isn't much about the Minor Arcana). Dunn provides a list of keywords and sample illustrations for both of these, and if you're feeling adventurous, you could get started learning Lenormand from that. But I think many people want a bit more to work with when they're learning a new system. For instance, card combinations are important in reading Lenormand. I enjoyed Dunn's analysis of four kinds of card combinations, but if this was my introduction to Lenormand, that would have confused me. He refused to list card combinations—and I understand there's always a danger when you have a list like that of deciding those are the only right answers and not trusting your intuition—but I liked seeing several examples (in other books) to get a feel for them.

Since other books will lead you through the basics, I recommend reading this book for what it covers that those others don't. There's a chapter on asking questions that would be useful for any form of divination, not just cartomancy. Dunn discusses questions that reveal meaning and those that reveal data, why some querents don't seem to have questions or don't want to tell you what they are, and how to focus a question so that it gets at what the querent actually wants to know. He speculates on how divination works and offers suggestions on how to use abductive reasoning (nonrational thinking) to perceive patterns. He talks about how to pay attention to how your body feels when you consider card combinations so that you're less likely to lie to yourself about a reading. There's a chapter on divination and magic, for when you wish to shape events, not just learn about them. Dunn writes with a sense of humor (the first appendix is called "Okay, Fine, A List of Meanings for the Cards, if You Insist"), and I thought the book was not just informative but a pleasure to read.
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Language

Original language

English

Physical description

290 p.

ISBN

0738736007 / 9780738736006

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