BRING THE INSIGHT, WISDOM, AND JOY OF THE FAERIES INTO YOUR LIFE
Using the enchanted art of Brian Froud as your guide, enter into the wise and wonderful world of the faeries. The Faeries’ Oracle calls on sylphs, pans, gnomes — and, of course, faeries — to lead you on a delightful journey of adventure, discovery, and enlightenment that will illuminate the future and heal the heart and soul. This beautifully designed divination set contains everything you will need to explore this mysterious realm, including:
A complete deck of 66 radiant cards by Brian Froud featuring goblins, moon dancers, pixies, boggarts, and other faery folk we first met in Good Faeries/Bad Faeries
208-page illustrated book with text by Jessica Macbeth, which will show you how to read the cards of The Faeries’ Oracle, with particular instruction on personally connecting to and communicating with the faeriesAuthor and illustrator Brian Froud offers believers a chance to consult with the magical wee folks. Using a deck of 66 “oracle cards,” believers conduct readings as if interpreting Tarot cards. Each of the cards features Froud’s signature faery pictures. Some of the cards have specific faeries, like the naked leaping “Spirit Lancer”–a feminine card that represents “self-expression, freedom, and exploration,” according to the accompanying text written by Jessica Macbeth. Others are more abstract, like the “Guardian of the Gate,” a blue- tinted card with splaying silver-white streaks that look like tendrils of faery hair.
This fascinating deck will keep Froud fans delighted for hours. Once seekers are ready to actually start communicating with faeries, they will also be delighted with Macbeth’s whimsical, yet highly informative, guidebook. She is quick to sympathize with the self-consciousness that comes with talking to faeries, yet she also has the ability to jolly people out of their embarrassment. Macbeth is at her wisest when discussing how to ask for guidance and interpret specific layouts of oracle cards. But if you find yourself succumbing to giggles in the midst of all this faery woo-woo, take heart. Writes Macbeth, “Giggles are the grace notes of faery music.” –Gail Hudson