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Mary K. Greer's 21 Ways to Read a Tarot Card
 
 
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Mary K. Greer's 21 Ways to Read a Tarot Card (Paperback)
by Mary K. Greer (Author)
Key Phrases: flanking cards, elemental dignities, tarot journal, Major Arcana, High Priestess, Golden Dawn (more...)
  4.9 out of 5 stars 11 customer reviews (11 customer reviews)  

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Buy this book with Tarot for Your Self : A Workbook for Personal Transformation Second Edition by Mary K. Greer today!

Mary K. Greer's 21 Ways to Read a Tarot Card Tarot for Your Self : A Workbook for Personal Transformation Second Edition
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Editorial Reviews
Book Description
Drawing on nearly forty years of tarot experience, Mary K. Greer has developed a new energizing approach-made up of twenty-one stimulating techniques-to interpret or deepen your understanding of each card. Just as the twenty-one letters of the alphabet can be combined to form billions of words, Greer's twenty-one methods can be used in any combination for gaining amazing new insights and perspectives. Emphasizing both traditional and personal methods of interpretation, Greer's techniques involve storytelling, sketching, symbols, metaphors, dialogues, acting, and other imaginative exercises. Designed to bring about interaction, transformation, and empowerment, this twenty-one-pronged approach to tarot can help readers expand standard interpretations and evolve new ways of connecting to the cards.

Winner of the Coalition of Visionary Resources Award for Best Divination Book

About the Author
Mary Greer is an author and teacher specializing in methods of self-exploration and transformation. A Grandmaster of the American Tarot Association, she is a member of numerous Tarot organizations, and is featured at Tarot conferences and symposia in the United States and abroad. Mary also has a wide following in the women's and pagan communities for her work in women's spirituality and magic. A Priestess-Hierophant in the Fellowship of Isis, she is the founder of the Iseum of Isis Aurea.Mary has studied and practiced Tarot and astrology for over 34 years. Her teaching experience includes eleven years at New College of California, as well as at many workshops, conferences, and classes. She is the founder and director of the learning center T.A.R.O.T. (Tools and Rites of Transformation).Her books include Tarot for Your Self: A Workbook for Personal Transformation (1984); Tarot Constellations: Patterns of Personal Destiny (1987); Tarot Mirrors: Reflections of Personal Meaning (1988); The Essence of Magic: Tarot, Ritual, and Aromatherapy (1993); Women of the Golden Dawn: Rebels and Priestesses (1995); and Aromatherapy: Healing for the Body and Soul (1998), with Kathi Keville.

See all Editorial Reviews


Product Details
  • Paperback: 310 pages
  • Publisher: Llewellyn Publications (May 1, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0738707848
  • ISBN-13: 978-0738707846
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 7.4 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.9 out of 5 stars 11 customer reviews (11 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #30,057 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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    #15 in  Books > Religion & Spirituality > New Age > Divination > Tarot

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Mary K. Greer's latest blog posts
       
 
Mary K. Greer sent the following posts to customers who purchased Mary K. Greer's 21 Ways to Read a Tarot Card
 
7:20 PM PDT, March 15, 2008, updated at 1:09 PM PDT, March 16, 2008
What do you keep your tarot cards in? The cardboard box they came with? A carved wooden box? A velvet bag? A Guatemalan woven pouch?

I knit socks and end up with lots of leftover yarn. One day, when trying to figure out what to do with the yarn, I realized I could knit a deck sock! That was the beginning of my search for the perfect knitted tarot bag. I have pictures of my endeavors at my other blog:
http://marygreer.wordpress.com/
where you'll also find articles on "Psychic, Intuitive or Therapeutic Tarot," the Golden Dawn Minors, Elemental Dignities, the dreaded Ten of Swords, and much more.

What about storing decks: do you keep them hidden away in a drawer, storage chest or suitcase, or out on view on a bookcase?

My favorite carrier for a small number of decks (about 8) is a Caboodles make-up case. It's clear hard plastic so I can see just what decks I've put inside, plus there's a carrying handle on top.

For storing individual decks, the most space-saving system I've found is a floor-to-ceiling bookcase made from 1" x 4" wood. It's narrow enough to fit behind a door or in a hallway and all the decks are displayed clearly. Of course, my ideal would be to have glass doors so the decks wouldn't get dusty. You can also top a chest-high bookcase with this narrower one so that your bigger decks and your books can go below and the decks with boxes that fit tightly can go above.

Send in your suggestions.
 
1 Comment    

2:50 PM PDT, September 6, 2007, updated at 3:14 PM PDT, September 6, 2007
I am very proud to announce that over the past year-and-a-half I've been honored with three awards for my work in the field of tarot:

•In 2006 I received the Mercury Award for "excellence in communication in the metaphysical field" from the Mary Redman Foundation. It  is in recognition of "the profound influence the book  Tarot for Your Self : A Workbook for Personal Transformation has had on untold numbers of individuals." As a result of this award I was able to go on my first, transformative journey to Egypt.

•In 2007 my latest book  Mary K. Greer's 21 Ways to Read a Tarot Card  earned the Coalition of Visionary Resources (COVR) Award for "Best Book in Divination."

•And in 2007 I received the International Tarot Award for Lifetime Achievement, from the Association for Tarot Studies,  joining previous recipients Eden Gray (author), Stuart Kaplan (founder of USGamesInc) and K. Frank Jensen (of Denmark's Tarot Museum). Votes were gathered from tarot associations such as TABI in the UK, the ATA in the USA, the TGAs of Australia and New Zealand, and the former ITS (who gave the prior awards); as well as publishers US Games, LoScarabeo, and Llewellyn; on-line resources Aeclectic Tarot and TarotGarden; the Tarot School, Tarot University; and individual expert voices from France, Japan, South Africa, Denmark, Czechoslovakia and Australia.

According to the awarding President of the