UPDATE with corrected links: The deck is now available for immediate shipping. Contact Ed Buryn at edburynbooks@sbcglobal.net or use the new order form at http://www.blaketarot.com/ The book and additional information is available on-line here.

Announcing … the 2010 Revised Edition of

The William Blake Tarot of the Creative Imagination

Created by Ed Buryn

The WILLIAM BLAKE TAROT, first published in 1995 by HarperCollins and long out of print, is again available in a revised edition that offers better color rendition, improved details, and numerous stylistic changes – while retaining all the qualities that made this deck a breakthrough in Tarot for creative endeavors and personal divination.

This revised deck is exactly the same size (80 x 120 mm = 3.15 x 4.75 inches), but all the card images are larger due to smaller borders. The back design is now green instead of blue to differentiate the editions, and fine details are noticeably sharper and cleaner on all the cards. The basic designs are the same, but close inspection will reveal hundreds of small changes that enhance its overall appearance and utility. In effect, this unique and beautiful Tarot deck is better than ever.

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Owners and users of the original deck will appreciate being able to replace their old or worn decks at a reasonable price, without having to buy another expensive book-and-deck set. For new owners, the deck comes with a booklet of card spreads and meanings. In any case, the entire original book will soon be available online for free download.

This boxed set of 80 cards and 32-page booklet will not be sold in bookstores. To order your copy now, please mail cash, check, or money order to TAROT, PO Box 720, Nevada City CA 95959; or pay online with your credit card at www.paypal.com payable to edburynbooks@sbcglobal.net. All orders will be filled beginning October 2010. [Take advantage of the special “Advance Order” price.]

The price of this new deck will be $32 plus $5 shipping, for a total cost of $37 each. For California orders, add $2.85 sales tax, for a total cost of $39.85 each. Orders to Canada and Mexico are $32 plus $7 shipping, for a total cost of $39 each. Orders to other overseas countries are $32 plus $10 shipping, for a total cost of $42 each.

To view these cards now and to do readings with them, go online to www.myDivination.com where you can also view each of the cards. The online readings at www.facade.com currently still use the original deck but will be updated to the new deck soon. In addition, online readings and more information will be available soon at a Blake Tarot site presently under construction.

This deck, by my ex-husband, Ed Buryn, originally involved copious input and suggestions by me and now the graphic expertise of his current wife, Joanna Buryn. Nevertheless, it is primarily a joint creative collaboration between Ed and William Blake.

Creating the William Blake Tarot

One of my students at New College of California, in the early ’80s, submitted a paper with a selection of Blake images that he found similar to the tarot Major Arcana. Ed, inspired by this, urged me to create a whole deck based on Blake whom I had studied in college. Fifteen years later he was still nagging me about doing it before somebody else did—while I was in the midst of a book deadline, no less! I snapped at him, “If it’s so important, you do it!” In that instant, we both looked at each other and knew it was absolutely what he had to do!

Ed created and self-published The William Blake Triumphs and presented them at San Francisco BATS, where a representative of HarperCollins saw them. We got a call early one morning from Harper/Thorson’s in London who wanted to see examples of a Minor Arcana right away. By the end of that day we had conceptualized the suits around Blake’s four “eternal arts” based on the Zoas (or “divine energies”) and came up with the four court figures of Man, Woman, Child and Angel. It all seemed so obvious that the process was truly effortless, and accompanied by an ecstatic high.

While I had a lot of input, every final decision, all the art work, and the book (except for editing and some ideas from me for the card interpretations) was Ed’s. For instance, being somewhat of a tarot purist, I argued long and hard against a 79th card that Ed insisted was necessary to complete the vision. However, I now love the Eternity Card and can’t imagine the deck without it!

At the time, museums still claimed copyright to works they owned (since then such claims have been invalidated), so Ed worked from black and white photocopies of multiple versions of Blake’s prints and hand-colored them. He read every work by and on Blake that he could get his hands on, and I helped him with traditional card meanings and theories on the creative process. Since Ed had used tarot before I met him, advocating taking cards on the road in his book, Vagabonding in the U.S.A., and had edited all my tarot books, his own knowledge was pretty extensive anyway.

I urge you to check out this extraordinary deck, made even better in the new edition.

I was just interviewed about the laws regarding psychic services by Jason Pitzl-Waters for Wild Hunt – one of the leading voices for analysis and insight into how modern Pagan faiths are represented within the mainstream media. Feel free to add your voice here or on at the Wild Hunt site.

This earlier post discusses additional aspects of the situation.

Here’s another Donnaleigh tarot music video discovery. The tarot reading starts just after 2:30. Can you ID the deck? Enjoy.

Update: As of October 2010, a court in East Ridge, Tennessee, ruled that a woman was exercising her free speech in fortune-telling for the public – read it here.

At the same time as the ACLU wins freedom-of-speech rights for fortune tellers in Maryland, Michigan is cracking down on their fortune tellers. Even Time Magazine is reporting on this news.

Elizabeth Dias at Time Magazine begins her article with: “Starting this week, fortune tellers in Warren, Mich., must be fingerprinted and pay an annual fee of $150 – plus $10 for a police background check – to practice their craft. The new rules are among America’s strictest on palmists, fortune readers and other psychics, part of a growing push to regulate a business that has never been taken, or overseen, very seriously.” Read the whole article here.

What’s your opinion about regulation of any kind? Is it necessary? How should it be done? Please comment.

Here’s one way around such discriminatory practices as reported a year ago in St. Petersburg FL.

In this music video the cards used are Wahrsagekarten – a style of cartomancy deck found in Germany and Eastern Europe. (Thanks to Donnaleigh.)

In this music video two children do a five card tarot reading predicting a series of future events—all happening at the same resort hotel. Meanwhile we see their future selves (at these five different times) interspersed with their child selves. The exquisite Olivia Wilde, who appears on the TV program “House,” is the final adult woman. The deck appears to have been created specifically for this video. It’s worth watching several times to piece together the whole story.

Can anyone pick out what cards they are supposed to be and describe each of the predicted events?

Here’s an unexpectedly decent report on tarot, especially for being on a TV talk show. It features Treadwell’s Bookstore in London.

The second annual Minnesota Area Tarot Symposium (MATS) is scheduled for the weekend of August 20-22, 2010, at the Dakota Ridge Hotel in the Twin Cities suburb of Eagan, Minnesota.

Katrina Wynne, a psychotherapist who writes about tarot counseling, will be on Tarot Today Radio, sponsored by The Tarot Guild this Tuesday, August 10th at 6pm (PT). Catch the Tarot Today radio show twice a week—Sundays at 10am (PT) and Tuesdays at 6pm. You’ll find lots of great interviews and discussions at the Tarot Today Radio website. Also, check out Katrina’s blog post on “Tarot Counseling vs. Predictive Readings.”

Mike Hernandez has an intriguing blog post on Prediction versus Forecasting when answering questions about the future.

U.S. Games Systems, Inc. now has a blog, Fool Stop Tarot overseen by Janet, the USGS Social Media Maven, that showcases new decks and also has fun games and interesting articles. My favorite is the “Tarot CSI Case Series” in which you identify the crime based on the evidence of a couple of tarot cards. There’s also a fascinating interview with Stuart Kaplan by Dr. Stephen Winick, Folklore Specialist for the Library of Congress. What will be of great interest to many in the tarot world is Kaplan’s discussion of the controversy over the rights to Waite’s deck. Kaplan explains, “The copyright protection on the Rider-Waite Tarot runs to 2021, which is seventy years after the date of death of the artist [Pamela Colman Smith].” While many will want to argue this—that U.S. copyright places works around the world prior to 1923 in the public domain, or that the art was a “work for hire” and so copyright ends in 2012 (seventy years after the death of Waite)—Kaplan has sued twice and won both cases. The 2021 date and the creative rights of Pamela Colman Smith have yet to be tested in court.

Simon Wintle‘s World of Playing Cards website features a timeline of Early References to Playing Cards and lots of other goodies.

Julia Gordon-Bramer reports that in the original manuscript of Sylvia Plath’s book of poems, Ariel, the poems were ordered according to the Tarot and Qabala. The first twenty-two poems are associated with the Major Arcana and the next ten with the ten pips and sephiroth, followed by the four ranks of the Court, and then the four suits. This ordering is apparent in Ariel: The Restored Edition (2004) as explained in an article by Gordon-Bramer for the journal Plath Profiles. Download a pdf of the article here. Listen to Sylvia Plath read “Daddy” with its tarot reference here.

James Wells created “An Empowerment Tarot Layout” (found at his always inspiring Circle Ways blog) based on the twelve resources for empowerment that I discovered through the life stories of Moina Mathers, Florence Farr, Maud Gonnne and Annie Horniman and explain in my book Women of the Golden Dawn: Rebels & Priestesses.

James Ricklef continues his popular “Ask Knighthawk” tarot advice column on his new blog and invites readers to send in a question. “Ask Knighthawk” was the basis of James’ innovative and extremely helpful book Tarot Tells the Tale. Also check out his deck, Tarot of the Masters.

Tero Hynynen from Finland has created his own animoto video on the Book of Thoth. His Tarotpuu blog has articles on Tarot in both Finnish and English.

The latest issue of the Association for Tarot Studies Newsletter features an article on Rudolph Steiner and Tarot by Jean-Michel David.

Tarot Professionals has recently opened Tarosophy Tarot Town, a social networking environment. Membership is currently free. Also check out issue 7 of Tarosophist International. It has some of the best articles I’ve seen in a while: Robert Place: The Often Misunderstood Pamela Colman Smith, Dr. Angela Voss: Divination as Divine Revelation, Dr. Elinor Greenberg: Tarot & Psychotherapy: The Bad Cards, Katrina Wynne:  Tarot & Counselling, Jean-Michel David: Tarot & Certification, Mike Hernandez: Using Multiple Decks, Lucy Setters: Finding Your Intuitive Voice, Tero Hynenen: Tarot Walkabout [an amazing concept!!! mkg] and much, much more.

Donnaleigh and Storm Cestavani host blogtalk radio’s Beyond World’s—Your Tarot Tribe. They recently talked with Enrique Enriques about the Marseille deck, poetry and more. After their summer vacation they’ll return on September 11th with an interview with Robert Place on the Minor Arcana. And don’t forget The Storm Cestavani Show that covers the worlds of spirituality, pop culture, and celebrity via astrology, tarot and psychic insights among other things.

Leisa ReFalo‘s The Tarot Connection podcast has just celebrated its 100th episode with a discussion of tarot’s most controversial issues featuring Donnaleigh, Storm Cestavani, Ginny Hunt, and Thalassa [what a line-up of those-in-the-know!].

I updated my post on Mlle. Lenormand (see end) with the text from a novel about the French Republic by Alexandre Dumas that describes, in depth, Lenormand’s readings for both Josephine and Napoleon. Dumas claims, though, that this part of his book is not fiction: “I can guarantee the truth of this scene, for these details were given me by the friend and pupil of Mademoiselle Lenormand, Madame Moreau, who still lives (1867) at No. 5 Rue du Tournon, in the same rooms as the famous seeress, where she devotes herself to the same art with immense success.” Certainly the card reading itself, for Josephine, has the most detail I’ve ever seen describing a nineteenth century card reading.

Let me know what things I’ve forgotten and I’ll create a new Tarot News Shorts for all the things I’ve missed (& those that haven’t been created yet).

The Two-Day BATStravaganza!

The San Francisco Bay Area Tarot Symposium,
produced by Thalassa
in association with the Daughters of Divination
August 28-29, 2010
First Unitarian Universalist Centre
1187 Franklin (at Geary), San Francisco

Featuring a most EXTRA-ORDINARY line-up of deck creators, authors, vendors & aficionados:
Rachel Pollack, Emily Carding, Marcus Katz, Leisa ReFalo, James Wanless, Mary K. Greer, Diane Wilkes, Pamela Eakins, Joseph Martin, Teressena & Martien Bakens, Ellen Lorenzi-Prince, Jaymi Elford, Katrina Wynne, Arisa Victor, Bill Haigwood, Carole Pierce, Thena MacArthur, Holly Voley, Tarot Garden, Baba Studios.

Here’s an hd four minute extension of my original animoto video from The Cartomancer Series. Try it full screen. What do these images say about cartomancers and cartomancy?

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Mary K. Greer has made tarot her life work. Check here for reports of goings-on in the world of tarot and cartomancy, articles on the history and practice of tarot, and materials on other cartomancy decks. Sorry, I no longer write reviews. Contact me HERE.

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