16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Finest Tool for Teaching Tarot I have Came Across, July 23 2002
By "firerizing" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Tarot Directory (Spiral-bound)
The design of this book in and of itself is partially what makes it so great. No more bindings to snap or break or trying to hold a book open to a page while you examine a card. This is a spiral bound book with the wiring enclosed into the hardbound cover. The sections are tabbed, the cards' images are just lovely. The information, while not extremely thorough is certainly more than many starter books give on each card.
I am so impressed with this book, I recommend it to anyone who is interested in learning tarot, who teaches it or has friends who are interested.
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I believe the word is: Wow., July 28 2004
By Jasmine - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Tarot Directory (Spiral-bound)
The Tarot Directory is as appealing visually as it is content-wise. It's filled with information and images, but clean and organized. The book is even divided up into sections with tabs that stick out of the sides for quick reference.
It has the look of a day planner, which works to its advantage in many ways - it's easy to carry around and it is very sturdy. Personally speaking, I'm not someone who is fond of the idea of everyone knowing of my interest in tarot, but this book is safe to carry around. It's inconspicuous - my nosy friends are much more likely to go for the gameboy than the book.
However, it's what's inside the directory that makes this book 100% worth your time and money. Each card is explained by details of the illustration, an introduction to the card, the symbolism behind it, and the interpretation if it were to show up in a spread. Each card also has three keywords to define its general meaning, which is another bonus.
The minor arcana is covered as well as the major, which isn't always the case in some books, and it is covered with the respect it deserves as part of the tarot.
There are also details of how prepare and conduct a reading, and, possibly my favourite part of the book, there are a few tarot spreads, with examples of how they could be read, with real people (it even includes their pictures).
Another thing that isn't always present in tarot books, and something that was a welcome addition here, were the notes on creating one's own spread. As someone who often has to make my own, I very much enjoyed this part of the book, and I found the the suggestions given by Annie Lionnet didn't contradict my own methods, and in fact, found that they helped my own technique.
And once you finish, and you're wanting to dive deeper, the back has a list of helpful books and websites to visit.
15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Well-Made, Too Warm & Fuzzy, Dec 25 2004
By J. W. Kennedy "in statu uiae et meriti" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Tarot Directory (Spiral-bound)
This book was made to be useful. Its design is definitely its strong point. Ring-bound so it lies open flat. Thumb tabs for each chapter (though perhaps tabs for each suit would have been even MORE useful.) It has full-color pictures from dozens of different decks, which enables you to see how the same card has been depicted by various artists - something very handy which I have not seen in any other book. Card descriptions are thorough and accurate. You really couldn't go wrong with this book.
The reason I took away a star, though, is this: the interpretations are just a bit too "positive, self-affirming, upbeat" even for the gloomiest cards, like in the suit of swords. It's almost as if the author has intentionally shied away from telling us anything unpleasant or scary ... but sometimes the cards do have grim warnings to give. Also, I incorporate inversions into my readings (if a card appears upside-down in a spread, that changes its meaning) which is a subject Ms Lionnet does not even touch.
So, I give this one 4 stars because it's handy, well-designed, useful ... but not _quite_ complete.