Okay, here's an example of one of the completed pages for the information and interpretation, to give y'all a taste for how I'm approaching this. This one is for Athene. (The first line should be italicised as a quote from the Goddess):
Cup your ear to the heart-of-wisdom.
Athene is a Goddess so ancient that the meaning of Her name is lost; but She has long been associated with Her city, Athens, and its sacred center, the city on the height called the Akropolis. The owl, with its bright eyes and reputation for wisdom is Her sacred bird and She is often shown with one. Athene’s sphere is the human mind and all its potential; She is known for Her intelligence and the clarity of Her thinking, and could be cunning and crafty when the occasion demanded it. With the mind comes invention and creativity, technology and civilization, and Athene is credited with devising many of humanity’s most basic and useful things, such as the olive and its oil, cooking, pottery, weaving, the plow, yoke, bridle, chariot and ship, the aulos or double flute, the trumpet, and numbers and ethics. She tamed the first horse, and, some say, breathed life into the first humans.
She is associated with the stormy sky, and wields the thunderbolt. She often wore the aegis, a sort of mantle which represents the thundercloud, and lightning with its sudden flash of brilliance is a symbol of Her insight. She is a warrior Goddess, adept in strategy, though She does not love battle for its own sake; rather She fights for justice and the reinstatement of order.
In legend She is given various fathers, such as the sea-God Poseidon or the Kretan river-God Triton; but most often Her father is said to be Zeus. In that tale, Zeus fathered Her on the Goddess Metis, Whose name means "Wisdom". But once She was pregnant Zeus learned of a oracle that said any son born of Metis would overthrow His father, so He took the precaution of swallowing Metis whole. But that did not halt the pregnancy, and some time later Athene burst from His head, fully grown and fully armed.
In the Greek conception Athene was a virgin Goddess, immune to the powers of the Love-Goddess Aphrodite and yielding to no male. This did not however mean that She could not mother or nurture another, as She did with the half-serpent half-human child Erechthonios Whom She raised to become the second king of Athens. In the classical story, Hephaestos the Craftsman-God was tricked into believing Athene loved Him, but when He came to Her She rejected Him, and His seed spilled onto the earth, creating Erechthonios. This awkward episode may well have come about to square an earlier version in which Athene actually was his mother with the inviolable virginity of later belief. At any rate Her virginity is indicative of a Goddess Who needs no male because She is fully complete and balanced within Herself.
Athene in a reading indicates wit and intellect, and the ability to achieve a favorable outcome. This card asserts that you have all the skills you need in the situation, and that calm, clear-headed thinking is what is required, whether the situation calls for diplomacy or for a fight—and also that you are able to distinguish between the two. You have access to a confidence and creativity you may not know you possess, and you can rely on your ingenuity in these matters.
This card also indicates great knowledge and learning, both of the "book" and the practical kind, and the wisdom to apply these skills properly. You are feeling inspired and inventive. The arts are almost certainly involved, and can include both what we call the fine arts, like painting or sculpture, and the "lesser" crafts such as knitting a sweater or building a bookcase, as well as other creative endeavors such as cooking a beautiful meal: to the ancients, and to Athene, they are one and the same, and equally worthy and satisfying.
Do not forget that in some stories Athene is a shapeshifter and more than a little tricksy, and that you may not always recognize Her influence. Keep your wits about you and trust your intuition and your deep sense of justice to help you see through to the truth of the situation.
Athene was traditionally offered pieces of beautiful cloth, such as the peplos woven in saffron and purple for Her annual festival, where She was also given honeycombs and cakes.
She is more usually called Athena: "Athene" is the form used by Homer. She has many, many epithets, describing the great variety of Her skills and characteristics: Polias ("Of the City"), Parthenos ("Virgin" or "Girl"), Promachos ("Champion"), Ergane ("Worker"), Mekhanitis ("Inventor"), Sthenias ("Strong"), Nike ("Victory"), Pronoia ("Forethought"), Apaturia ("Deceitful"), and Glaukopis ("Bright-eyed", though originally perhaps "Owl-eyed").