Arts & Culture
Review: The Tarot for You and Me
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Lauren Parker reviews the new Tarot for You and Me guidebook and deck by Gary D’Andre and Jess Vosseteig, available at the end of the month from Simon Element.
The Wild Hunt (https://wildhunt.org/category/features/page/21)
Lauren Parker reviews the new Tarot for You and Me guidebook and deck by Gary D’Andre and Jess Vosseteig, available at the end of the month from Simon Element.
In this week’s Pagan Community Notes: Christian backlash over Bambie Thug’s Eurovision performance, Faun releases new video, events, and more updates.
Now owned by English Heritage, the Thornborough Henges are a complex of three large Neolithic henge monuments located in North Yorkshire, England, dating back to between 3500 and 2500 BCE. They are notable not only for their archaeological importance but also for their contemporary cultural relevance, as English Heritage has been supportive of the Beltane Pagan festival held there.
Today’s dispatch comes from J.D. Harlock, who introduces us to a form of Naturalistic Paganism based in the history and landscape of Lebanon. “Embracing Naturalistic Paganism fosters a sense of kinship and purpose among all Lebanese, regardless of their background, allowing for communal healing with a peaceful but powerful resistance against the forces that wish Lebanon to be fragmented.”
“Witches can often enjoy the film versions of ourselves,” says Meg Elison in today’s review of the new movie TAROT, “who worship fake deities, cast nonsense spells, and practice bonkers made-up magic. Even those Witches will have a hard time enjoying Tarot, a new horror film by Spencer Cohen and Anna Halberg. Simply put, this movie is tarot-ble.”