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For me, that was the draw with Lenormand from the very beginning: it's crystal clear, very literal and goes "straight for the jugular," so to speak. Even if it is a bit more like Lego-block building than fine architecture.
Exactly.
For me, that was the draw with Lenormand from the very beginning: it's crystal clear, very literal and goes "straight for the jugular," so to speak. Even if it is a bit more like Lego-block building than fine architecture.
So am I! And I hope that Kelly (of The Truth in Story) will write a book someday, too. I'd also love to see a Kipper book from Kelly.Looking forward to Donna Leigh's new Lenornand
So am I! And I hope that Kelly (of The Truth in Story) will write a book someday, too. I'd also love to see a Kipper book from Kelly.
Musruck has self-published a Kipper book, but it's not available through Amazon yet and I'm uncomfortable about ordering it from him through his website or Etsy site.
You're right, I'd forgotten that. Thank you!You can buy Musruck's Kipper book through LuLu publishing co.
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...
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. But my main resource is the binder I put together from the numerous blog posts that are out there, which I have organized and tabbed by author and topic.
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.
For me, that was the draw with Lenormand from the very beginning: it's crystal clear, very literal and goes "straight for the jugular," so to speak. Even if it is a bit more like Lego-block building than fine architecture.