Tarot Tales
by Rachel Pollack (Editor), Caitlín Matthews (Editor)
On This Page
Description
A diverse collection of sixteen stories, each triggered by images of the Tarot. They are by various authors and include medieval parodies, fantasy adventures, New Age satires, comedies of manners and even a fresh addition to Irish mythology.Tags
Recommendations
Member Recommendations
Member Reviews
I was excited to discover this old mass-market paperback fantasy anthology in a secondhand bookshop, where it had been mistakenly (?) shelved with the occult books. It includes some of my very favorite English fantasy authors, including Michael Moorcock, M. John Harrison, and Robert Irwin. The third of these usually isn't even classed as a genre fantasist, and an even more surprising author to see in the mix was Irwin's fellow Orientalist scholar Peter Lamborn Wilson! Editors Caitlin Matthews and Rachel Pollack have solid credentials as Tarot savants and authors of fiction both, and each contributes a worthwhile story to the book.
All of the individual stories were commissioned for this volume, and I have not seen any of them published show more elsewhere. The editors' stipulation was that Tarot should be used in the process of composing each tale. Despite the odd "Chapter One," "Chapter Two" in the story headings (but not the table of contents), there are no continuities of narrative, no shared characters, and no significantly overlapping settings among any of the stories. A few are science fiction, several are overt extensions or reinterpretations of ancient myth, and one or two are firmly in the horror genre. Moorcock's contribution "Hanging the Fool" is a 20th-century installment of his Von Bek metatext with no supernatural elements at all, and with a nod to H. Rider Haggard. Two of the stories, "Rembrandts of Things Past" by Sheila Finch and "The Devil's Picturebook" by R.J. Stewart, operate in a theological (as opposed to mythic) register, and I found them weaker for it.
On the whole, the tales in this volume are sophisticated and engaging. More than a few of the stories have Tarot diviners or experimenters as characters, and a handful have subsections named after trumps or other Tarot cards. In her introduction, Pollack cites Calvino's Castle of Crossed Destinies as precedent for the sort of work included here, but the presence of Tarot in these stories is more varied and often more subtle than in Calvino's book. The collection was first published in England in 1989, and my copy is the subsequent US release. I don't know if it's seen a printing in the 21st century, but it's a solid collection that I will easily recommend to those who share my tastes in fiction. show less
All of the individual stories were commissioned for this volume, and I have not seen any of them published show more elsewhere. The editors' stipulation was that Tarot should be used in the process of composing each tale. Despite the odd "Chapter One," "Chapter Two" in the story headings (but not the table of contents), there are no continuities of narrative, no shared characters, and no significantly overlapping settings among any of the stories. A few are science fiction, several are overt extensions or reinterpretations of ancient myth, and one or two are firmly in the horror genre. Moorcock's contribution "Hanging the Fool" is a 20th-century installment of his Von Bek metatext with no supernatural elements at all, and with a nod to H. Rider Haggard. Two of the stories, "Rembrandts of Things Past" by Sheila Finch and "The Devil's Picturebook" by R.J. Stewart, operate in a theological (as opposed to mythic) register, and I found them weaker for it.
On the whole, the tales in this volume are sophisticated and engaging. More than a few of the stories have Tarot diviners or experimenters as characters, and a handful have subsections named after trumps or other Tarot cards. In her introduction, Pollack cites Calvino's Castle of Crossed Destinies as precedent for the sort of work included here, but the presence of Tarot in these stories is more varied and often more subtle than in Calvino's book. The collection was first published in England in 1989, and my copy is the subsequent US release. I don't know if it's seen a printing in the 21st century, but it's a solid collection that I will easily recommend to those who share my tastes in fiction. show less
Sounds like an interesting concept. Get a bunch of people to do a tarot reading and base a story on the reading. They even include the reading in the text, with pictures of the different decks used, however it didn't really work for me. There were moments where the stories seemed to be working but then they left me cold.
Overall not my mileage.
Overall not my mileage.
Vampire stories: False prophecy / Jacqueline Lichtenberg (pp. 205-224).
Ratings
Members
- Recently Added By
Lists
Tarotiform Fiction
10 works; 1 member
Author Information

Rachel Pollack is considered one of the world's foremost authorities on the modern interpretation of the Tarot. She is a member of the American Tarot Association, the International Tarot Society, and the Tarot Guild of Australia and has taught at the famed Omega Institute for the past fifteen years. She is an award-winning fiction writer and has show more also written twelve books on the Tarot. She lives in New York. show less
All Editions
Some Editions
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 64
- Popularity
- 486,804
- Reviews
- 4
- Rating
- (2.57)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 3


























































