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Understanding Aleister Crowley's Thoth Tarot

Understanding Aleister Crowley's Thoth TarotAuthor: Lon Milo Duquette
Publisher: Weiser Books
Category: Book

List Price: $24.95
Buy New: $16.47
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Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 44 reviews
Sales Rank: 75058

Media: Paperback
Edition: 1ST
Pages: 352
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 8.7 x 5.9 x 1

ISBN: 1578632765
Dewey Decimal Number: 133.32424
UPC: 824297632764
EAN: 9781578632763
ASIN: 1578632765

Publication Date: November 1, 2003
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Aleister Crowley's Thoth Tarot was his final opus, the culmination of a lifetime of occult study and practice. With artist Lady Frieda Harris, he condensed the core of his teaching into the 78 cards of the tarot. Although Crowley's own Book of Thoth provides insight into the cards, it is a complicated, dated book. Now, in clear language, Lon Milo DuQuette provides everything you need to know to get the most out of using the Thoth deck.


Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 44
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5 out of 5 stars Understanding Uncle Al   August 7, 2010
Fred J. Smalley (san diego calif)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I saw Duquette lecture and was impressed by his information. This book's coverage of the cards is detailed with little stories only a devotee of Crowley's would know. I am happy with this book.


5 out of 5 stars Understanding Aleister Crowley's Thoth Tarot Review   July 21, 2010
Dimitri Bueno
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

This book is really impressive, the author explains not only the Tarot itself, but a vast group of knowledge necessary to understand it in a very simple and a non-tiring way. If one's is starting the studies of the Thoth Tarot I strongly recommend this book.


4 out of 5 stars If he didn't sound so condescending....   May 15, 2010
Dharma (Westchester, NY USA)
1 out of 3 found this review helpful

I would love this book... IF he wasn't constantly talking down to the reader.

The book is comprehensive, and wonderful. It gives you a great background on the Rosy Cross and a little about Qabbalah and some of the principles utilized in the Thoth deck... I love the information, its very helpful. I think the book is worth the buy. I think other reviewers have covered the book very well, and I myself have found many wonderful and revolutionary ideas in it that have changed the way I think. I love that.

I don't, however, love being talked to like I'm a bored trigonometry student in High School. Every paragraph or so he says "I know you must be sick of me discussing this" or "I can hear you all screaming 'no! no more!'" or "I'm sure by know you want to throw this book across the room, but please hear me out!" like I'm reading the book, but constantly for some reason wanting to throw it out the window? Why would I buy this book if I was sick of hearing the subject matter, or didn't want to listen to the author? I really dislike when people write this way, it assumes the reader is less intelligent then the author, and is very off putting I think. I would have liked this book much more if he left out all the little comments about the reader, as if he where watching us read his book. It annoys me, to be reading interesting subject matter, and have it interrupted with his assumptions that I'm too stupid to understand its importance, and there for must be very bored. Then I have to read his idiotic tangent about how he is begging me to keep reading, even though I was planning on doing that before he started said tangent, and then continue reading, a little more annoyed then before.

As a result, while being much easier to read and understand then the Book of Thoth, I find it hard to read for long periods of time because I feel annoyed by these passages. They are frequent throughout the entire book. Subsequently, I read it a few pages at a time, and then leave it be. I hope his other books do not have such a condescending tone, because I rather liked his style of writing aside from those remarks, and I think he is rather knowledgeable and probably has much to share.

all in all, the book is good, all be it a bit annoying. I think it is one of the most real guides to understanding what Crowley actually intended behind the cards. He includes letters between Frieda Harris and Crowley, he tries to not put his spin on it, its very helpful. If it weren't for the snarkiness I would give it a 5/5.



5 out of 5 stars DuQuette does a better job at teaching Crowley than Crowley   February 16, 2010
HQ seeker (Greenville, NC USA)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

The Thoth deck, while beautiful in appearance, is vastly different from other Tarot decks. How different you ask? Well Crowley changed two trump numberings (VII is now Justice, XI Lust/Strength which was common in older decks) and the big change, assigns trump XVII The Star the Hebrew letter/path Heh, and trump IV The Emperor Tzaddi. Kings are called Knights, and some of the small cards have been renamed (as far as their esoteric titles) as well. So to fully appreciate all these changes and to understand why Crowley did them, you'll need to understand a little bit of background info before studying this deck.

Cue Lon Milo DuQuette. As a Tarot master and high ranking member of Crowley's OTO, he has all the credentials one would want from someone writing about Crowley's tarot deck. Thankfully DuQuette is also a brilliant mind, and one with a great sense of humor. He explains everything important you'd need to know before studying the deck, and then takes you card by card, through the deck.

I'd recommend anyone interested in the Thoth deck (especially those who are studying Qabalah/magick) to get this book when you get your Thoth deck.



5 out of 5 stars a review   February 16, 2010
Out to Lunch
3 out of 3 found this review helpful

I really enjoyed Duquette's book and devoured it when I got it. He does an admirable job teaching people who do not have the background in kabbalah, tarot, or many occult subjects to give an introduction and insight into the Thoth tarot and into Aleister Crowley. That is his stated goal. Individuals without a great knowledge of the occult, Crowley, and the tarot are his intended target, and he beautifully introduces both tarot and Crowley to a wider audience.
If you have read extensively on Crowley, have great knowledge of the occult and understand Crowley then this book is not for you. You are not the intended audience. So don't bitch because you bought the wrong book. That's not DuQuette's fault.
For those of you who bicker about the black and white illustrations just get out your tarot deck and look at the card when you read the text. That's what I did. We'd all like to see color instead of black and white illustrations but I'm sure it would add greatly to the cost of the book and these books are already expensive enough. I don't want to pay an additional 15 or 20 dollars for color and better paper.
For those of you wanting a text with which to do a reading, this is not the book for you. You will not be able to give a reading with much understanding or synthesis based on this book and according to other reviews there are other books out there that better suited to this objective.
I picked this book out after reading many negative reviews of this book and others about the thoth tarot on the amazon site. I was not disappointed in this book and recommend it enthusiastically. Having been guided by another to look into kabbalah and having found Isreal Regardie and the Golden Dawn, I wanted to use tarot cards to help me understand and integrate knowledge of the kabbalah, tarot, and astrology. I didn't have a background in tarot and the occult. I've avoided occult orders because they seem to attract Luciferian characters. I've assiduously avoided Aleister Crowley because I've read the author's work directly and intensely disliked him. I think it is a tribute to DuQuette that he could improve my opinion of a man I detested. I learned that Crowley was a great patriot for England and an accomplished intellect. To the person who criticized the lack of a link with astrology, in his notes DuQuette explains that Crowley was the ghost writer for texts on astrology published under Evangeline Adams name.
One of the critics of DuQuette stated that Crowley told Harris to illustrate Crowley's tarot. Crowley did supervise Harris. Quoting from Greer's column on Crowley, "Crowley made clear that his student and artist, Frieda Harris, at no time contributed "a single idea of any kind to any card, and she is in fact almost as ignorant of the Tarot and its true meaning and use as when she began." That's the kind of misogynist arrogant remark I remembered typical of Crowley. I find it much more likely that Harris approached Crowley about producing a tarot deck than Crowley recruiting her for the project. Why would Crowley pick a woman artist whom he would consider inferior to and incapable of understanding his intellect? On the other hand, I doubt Crowley could have found a male artist willing to put up with all of Crowley's arrogance without abandoning the project and telling Crowley where to stick it (deservedly so). Crowley, while a great intellect, was an unbearable prick.
I learned from Duquette that the Rider Waite deck which I had been introduced to as an easy way to learn tarot was not the definitive tarot but merely an introduction. I'd always suspected as much but Duquette confirmed it. I wanted tarot cards from the Golden Dawn but when I looked at what was available, the art was so disappointing, I knew I would never use them. Since Crowley based his tarot on the Golden dawn's tarot and I liked Harris's art, I bought the cards even if they were directed by the Beast himself. There is a huge sexual overtone to the Thoth cards that isn't in the Rider Waite deck. DuQuette tells us that Crowley and the thoth tarot are based on sexual magic so don't be surprised to find that bias in this deck. Tantra is one of the paths to enlightenment. For some of you this may make the Thoth tarot even more attractive while deterring others. DuQuette doesn't dwell excessively on the sexual content; he doesn't have to, it's all in the images.
For those of you who want an introduction to the tarot, a brief overview of the various occult societies who contributed to the development of Crowley's Thoth tarot, this book delivers and it's an enjoyable read. I disagree with the person who found it useful only for the Thoth tarot. It deepened my understanding of the Rider Waite tarot as well as the Thoth tarot. So what if DuQuette apologizes and tells us little ditties about his wife's sign. I wasn't offended. Compared to what DuQuette brings to the table, these criticisms of his books are just so petty. I want to address the negative criticisms so others may find this book more attractive because it deserves your attention. Many of these occult texts are so densely packed with knowledge and so drily written, that I enjoyed a little levity for a change. I'm not affiliated with DuQuette or the OTO. Duquette delivers information and he makes learning fun, not a chore. I'd enjoy reading more from this author.


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aleister crowley  lon milo duquette  tarot  thelema  thoth tarot  
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