ooops! There's his name on the reviewing profile but signed Anne of Rhode Island. Something fishy there... I guess that tells me all I need to know. In that amazon listing you can see the blurb on the back and there's a listing of prolific deck publications - so many Lenormand's he's published! - why haven't I heard of him? Something fishy there too...
ooops! There's his name on the reviewing profile but signed Anne of Rhode Island. Something fishy there... I guess that tells me all I need to know. In that amazon listing you can see the blurb on the back and there's a listing of prolific deck publications - so many Lenormand's he's published! - why haven't I heard of him? Something fishy there too...
I think I'll pass on this one. We have Caitlin's and Rana's and Andy's and that excellent ebook by Anthony Luis. I was just curious about this one...From what I can see, with the scarcity of real lenormand resources out there, his might be a good one to check out.
Although I'm always on the lookout for more English-language stuff, I think I'll pass on this one too. My order of preference is Andy's (for its solid fundamentalism), Caitlin's (for its playing-card material) and Rana's (for its readability), along with the brief e-book by Anthony Louis; I also use Sylvie Steinbach's book for reference but not technique, and I haven't gone for the Katz/Goodwin books yet. Right now I'm reading Rachel Pollock's companion book to the Burning Serpent Oracle, which is long on traditional value and blessedly short on personal opinionizing.
I have read all the books you mention and also have not read Katz/Goodwin. Rachel Pollock's book is my newest, and I just finished reading it last night. She has me hooked. Way too many modern nuances these days. I am falling in love with the traditional meanings. Makes reading so much easier, in my opinion.