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Wild Mercy: Tarot Inspired Musings
 
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Wild Mercy: Tarot Inspired Musings [Paperback]

Elizabeth Cunningham (Author), Janet Black (Illustrator)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

June 1, 2007
Evocative, provocative, inspired and inspiring; Wild Mercy dips into the power behind the card image and brings back gold. "This is a book of poetry for both poetry connoisseurs and those who love to be touched intimately by beauty and honesty. Like all good collections of mystical poetry, Wild Mercy will touch your heart and push you to the edge of your comfort zone, make you laugh and make you squire" -- MatriFocus, Imbolc 2007

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 128 pages
  • Publisher: Creatrix Books (June 1, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0976060450
  • ISBN-13: 978-0976060451
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.4 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 6.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,333,598 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Elizabeth Cunningham is the direct descendant of nine generations of Episcopal priests. She grew up hearing rich (sometimes terrifying) liturgical and biblical language. When she was not in church or school, she read fairytales and fantasy novels or wandered in the enchanted wood of an overgrown, abandoned estate next door to the rectory. Her religious background, the magic of fairytales, and the numinous experience of nature continue to inform her work.

After being altogether too good and studious during her earliest years, Cunningham was expelled from a progressive boarding school for nudity. She subsequently earned a GED and went on to The College of General Studies at Boston University. From there she transferred to Harvard-Radcliffe College where she graduated in 1976 with BA in English and American language and literature. Somehow, she resisted the temptation to go to seminary to study for the Episcopal priesthood. The possibility was especially tempting, because, at that time, ordination of women was not allowed. When the church ruled in favor of women's ordination a few months later, she heaved a sigh of relief and went on writing The Wild Mother, her first novel, hailed by Publishers Weekly as a beguiling tour de force.

The Passion of Mary Magdalen, the centerpiece of The Maeve Chronicles, is Cunningham's fifth novel, and the book she believes she was born to write. Her other novels include The Return of the Goddess, a Divine Comedy; The Wild Mother; and How to Spin Gold, a Woman's Tale (re-released by Epigraph, May 2009). Magdalen Rising, the prequel to The Passion of Mary Magdalen was published in 2007. Bright Dark Madonna, the sequel, was published in April 2009. Red-Robed Priestess, the fourth and final Maeve Chronicle, was published in Novemeber, 2011.

Cunningham is also the author of two collections of poetry Small Bird, and Wild Mercy.

Although Cunningham managed to avoid becoming an Episcopal priest, she graduated from The New Seminary in 1997 and was ordained as an interfaith minister and counselor. Both The Maeve Chronicles and her interfaith ministry express Cunningham's profound desire to reconcile her Christian roots with her call to explore the divine feminine.

Since her ordination, Cunningham has been in private practice as a counselor and maintains that the reading and writing of novels has been as important to this work as her seminary training.

The mother of grown children, Cunningham lives with her husband in the Hudson Valley.

Elizabeth (and Maeve, the Celtic Mary Magdalen) can be followed on twitter, on her blog and on facebook. The links follow:

http://elizabethandmaeve.blogspot.com/

http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=61625329756&ref=ts

http://twitter.com/EliznMaeve

 

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Mystical, Poignant and Haunting, June 5, 2007
This review is from: Wild Mercy: Tarot Inspired Musings (Paperback)
"Everything I know about life and death I learned from leaves:
their iridescent youth
their dark tough serviceable summer
their brazen becoming of themselves
just before they let go
their Halloween afterlife
whispering whispering.

When I die I hope to go
on a huge wind
to a deep sky.
I hope somewhere my soul
to taste the scent of leaves." - "Leaves" from Wild Mercy

I have just finished reading a wonderfully profound compilation of 55 poems titled Wild Mercy: Tarot Inspired Musings and I'm thrilled to share it with you! At the heart of this collection of poetry is the Tarot--a rich, mystical deck of cards that have provided comfort, insight and confrontation to seekers around the world.

It is this mysterious landscape where novelist and poet Elizabeth Cunningham explores eight archetypal themes, each governed by a particular card from the Major Arcana. From The Moon's milky light to the luminosity of The Star, the ignorance and abuse of The Devil to nurturing yet erotic Empress, Wild Mercy celebrates the glorious messiness and chaotic magnificence of what it means to be human.

In the section dedicated to Death--one of my favorite parts of Wild Mercy--Ms. Cunningham gives voice to the goddess Demeter:

What Demeter Said

`When my daughter went down
I took the sun
and hurled it against the hard sky
shattered it into a million shards
to seed the dark, to send down roots
to roof her world.

Surely, gods, that much is allowed
to scatter love blind into the mothering ground."

The next poem, Persephone's Turn, is a reply of sorts to her mythological mother Demeter--but it's a shocking, sobering and defiant response that's set in modern times.

Replete with imagery that alternately lulls with lilting lyricism then arouses with the bracing blast of loss, cruelty and fanaticism--Ms. Cunningham took me with her to heights of gratitude and depths of depravity. And in the middle, resides the stuff of climbing trees, rowing boats, gathering kindling and picking flowers--but in the hands of such a skilled poet, these seemingly mundane activities are transformed into deeply moving interspiritual devotionals.
While the face of the wild, sensuous and creative goddess shines bright among the pages of Wild Mercy, Ms. Cunningham almost laughingly disputes the idea that She is at odds with the "sky gods", insisting that "they are lovers...sky and earth are made for each other and will not be parted by day by night."
The eight cards that inspired the evocative poetry of Wild Mercy are Death, Empress, Hanged One, Moon, Star, Devil, Hermit and Judgment. Here are some of my favorite portions from selected poems:
From the poem What Kali Tells Me (the Moon):
"All that clutter chokes
the next breath. Sillies,
by hoarding your toys
you stop the play.

Don't hold onto the tide.
Don't be a drag on the moon.
The wind is holding its breath
for you.

Let go let go let go."

From the poem Death Card (Death):

"Death, I may have to live a long time
in a hard world.
Give me grace to meet the smaller deaths,
the daily deaths that don't look
so grand or terrible, that pass
as pain, loss, failure, want.

Remind me to sing, Death.
Tell me a good joke now and then,
so when you come from the last time
without any mask
I can look you in the eye
without shame."

The poem Clarify, from the section inspired by Judgment:

"Clarity is a shield.

Light does not always illuminate
It can blind or dazzle.

Dark or light can be clear
day or night.

When I am clear
you can see inside to what is true
or you can see your own reflection.
You might blame me for what you see.
If I am clear
I will go on healing."

My husband and I both enjoyed this exquisite collection of poetry. In fact, as we sat out on our glider in the back yard last night--I'd pass Wild Mercy to him, exclaiming "Oh! You have to read THIS".

Then, he'd not only read that one--but the next and the next. Then when he gave it back, I'd read the poems *he* had skipped forward to--and we'd comment about the hard-won wisdom or evocative images painted by Ms. Cunningham. It was truly a delightful evening, thanks in part to Wild Mercy.

Mystical, haunting, honest and poignant, Wild Mercy will appeal to poetry lovers regardless of their familiarity with the Tarot--while Tarot enthusiasts will no doubt appreciate one poet's personal journey and transpersonal observations inspired by the cards.

Janet Boyer, author of The Back in Time Tarot Book: Picture the Past, Experience the Cards, Understand the Present (coming Fall 2008 from Hampton Roads Publishing)
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An impressive and enthusiastically recommended compilation of tarot inspired poetry, July 7, 2007
This review is from: Wild Mercy: Tarot Inspired Musings (Paperback)
An impressive and enthusiastically recommended compilation of tarot inspired poetry, the free verse poetry of Elizabeth Cunningham is unique with its metaphysical and Wiccan implications of image and mysticism. Inspired and inspiring, thoughtful and thought-provoking, this is a body of distinctive and imaginative verse that will resonate, line by line, image by image, and poem by poem in the mind and mind's eye of the reader. 'Failed Gods': All parents are failed gods./They do not keep the world safe./They do not deliver happiness.//They throw their children out of Eden/to cover their own shame.//They grow old and frail./Sometimes they are forgiven.
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