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The Language of Lenormand

A Practical Guide for Everyday Divination

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The Language of Lenormand

By: Erika Robinson
Narrated by: Julienne Irons
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About this listen

A much-needed guide to this increasingly popular divination system written by a Lenormand master and teacher.

The Lenormand deck, consisting of thirty-six numbered and named cards, has been popular in Europe for centuries, and has now been embraced in North America by tarot enthusiasts, oracle readers, and others. Each card depicts an archetype—a fox, a snake, a coffin, or whip, for example—rather than tarot's somewhat more involved symbology. This makes the Lenormand system an easy entry point to divination.

Respected Lenormand authority, Erika Robinson believes that Lenormand is not just a deck of cards, but is also a language that, if mastered, can help one achieve self-empowerment and the ability to attain the life you desire. In this, her first book, Robinson, a longtime English teacher, helps listeners become fluent in the language of Lenormand. The author provides a guide to the meanings of each card, so that no prior knowledge of Lenormand is required, however this is a sophisticated Lenormand book that takes Lenormand to the next level and is suitable for those who are already familiar with it.

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying PDF will be available in your Audible Library along with the audio.

©2023 Erika Robinson (P)2023 Tantor
Spirituality Parapsychology Divination Extrasensory Perception
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Incredibly repetitive and verbose language (ironic really). This is a suitable book for an absolute beginner who needs constant and repeated reminders that the cards do not work in isolation. But honestly, this is a very wordy and unnecessary approach to helping anyone in understanding the language of the cards. As a result it feels indulgent. And while I do not mind individual perspective of any author relating to divinatory practices (indeed I welcome such thoughts), this book lost me on its unique personal decision state that the long accepted notion of dark and light clouds as good/bad respective of position is somehow “literary racism”. This is an indulgently imposed self-belief of the author who is discussing relevant linguistics within the imagery. Dark clouds signify rain or stormy weather, where light clouds imply a brighter day there is nothing racially implied here on any literal stance. And yet this social awareness, if we want to call is that, is not consistently applied to the other cards and there historic imagery. Very odd and threw me off the narrative. There are better, succinct and focused books on Lenormand reading out there.

Indulgent Splurge of Words

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