Today we have a Tarot book review! It’s for a book called Magician and Fool by Susan Wands, published by Spark Press, and distributed through Simon & Schuster.
5 Points About This Book
1. Series: Magician and Fool is the first book in, what for now at least, is a three part series. Following Magician and Fool are High Priestess and Empress, and Emperor and Hierophant. I’m sensing a pattern here … may it continue.
2. Historical Fiction: Though the book is chalk full of real-life characters, the story itself is fiction … but it’s easy to believe in it! I ended up loving the magical Pamela Colman Smith … though the co-creator of my most cherished Thoth Tarot, Aleister Crowley, comes across as far less endearing.
3. Storyline: The overarching theme of Magician and Fool is magic and Tarot. It traces the story of Pamela Colman Smith from childhood through the creation of the Fool and Magician cards from her iconic Tarot deck. But it’s not a biography, more a raucous magical window into what it might have been like creating what was to become the most popular Tarot deck in the world. Not to mention a chance to get to know some of the amazing characters in the fledgling Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn and those they hung around.
4. Famous Names Making An Appearance: – Pamela Colman Smith, Arthur Edward Waite, Aleister Crowley, William Butler Yeats, Maud Gonne, Florence Farr, Bram Stoker, William Terriss, Ellen Terry, Henry Irving … and the list could go on.
5. Readability: It’s a page turning magical Tarot adventure story. This book is so fun! Very readable – I love it.
I highly recommend Magician and Fool to Tarot readers and magic enthusiasts of all kinds. And even if you don’t read cards, or care about the Golden Dawn, it’s still a delightful mystical romp. I’m really looking forward to High Priestess and Empress … stay tuned!
Magician and Fool – a tarot book review
July 23rd, 2025 § Comments Off on Magician and Fool – a tarot book review § permalink
Smith, Waite, and the RWS Minor Arcana
January 11th, 2013 § 0 comments § permalink
The Rider-Waite Smith deck is probably the most popular Tarot deck in the world. Though painted by Pamela Colman Smith, Arthur E. Waite is credited with most of the deck’s design. But is that fair?
In Mary K. Greer’s upcoming webinar, she’ll be investigating whether or not Waite should be given as much credit for the deck as he actually gets.
Though the famed occultist clearly had a specific plan for the Major Arcana, what about the images in the Minor cards? They were some of the first Tarot Minors to be illustrated with actual scenes in them rather than simply suit symbols.
How did they come about and whose idea were they? Pamela Colman Smith’s?
These are some of the questions Greer will be exploring in Secrets and Sources of the Rider-Waite Smith Minor Arcana.
The two-part class will be offered through Global Spiritual Studies and will be live January 24th and 31st at 9:00 pm ET (6:00 pm PT). It will be available afterwards on download and DVD.
Check out Greer’s blog, or go directly to the Global Spiritual Studies site to learn more.
Hope to see you there!
The Rider Waite Smith Tarot
November 10th, 2011 § 0 comments § permalink
Below is a short video describing the history of the Rider Waite Smith Tarot.
It’s kind of interesting, and certainly makes clear how important illustrating the Tarot pips was to the development of Tarot reading.
With practice, everyone can learn to read the symbols found in earlier decks like the Visconti-Sforza and the Tarot of Marseille.
But Arthur Waite’s decision to use descriptive pictures throughout the minor arcana made it easy for even first time users to do a reading. And to begin to understand the philosophy buried within the cards.
The RWS deck, accompanied by Waite’s Pictorial Key to the Tarot, opened Tarot up to everyone, not just those who were members of secret magical societies.
I think Waite was interested in much more than just ‘peering into the future’ as this piece seems to suggest, but it’s interesting nonetheless.
Through their deck, Arthur Waite and artist Pamela Colman Smith made an enormous contribution to Tarot. They really changed everything.
Susan and the Mermaid
December 8th, 2010 § 0 comments § permalink
Here’s a holiday gift for every Tarot lover’s list!
Susan and the Mermaid is the rediscovered tale of a magic ring, an underwater kingdom, and a wise old woman who knew how to make her granddaughter’s dreams come true. And if that’s not enough to entice you …. it was written and illustrated by Pamela Colman Smith!
Of course Tarot readers around the world know Smith as the illustrator of the Rider-Waite-Smith Tarot, perhaps the most widely used deck in the world. But did you know she was a writer? In fact, by the time she was twenty, Smith had already published three critically acclaimed books.
Susan and the Mermaid was first published in 1912, three years after the Rider-Waite-Smith deck. It appeared in the Christmas edition of The Delineator, a woman’s magazine meant for mothers and their children.
This new edition reproduces the original text and images. It also provides a close-up look at dozens of full-colour illustrations Smith created to accompany the story. It looks great.
Thank you Corrine Kenner for posting this video. I can’t wait to get a copy of the book!
listen hear to Corrine Kenner on Beyond Worlds