![]() Or maybe it’s just that I look at them differently. As is often the case, cards look different laid out in spreads. So what happened? I sat down at my desk today and started doing the spreads included in the book. The art style and the fact the deck only works with the seven classical “planets,” rather than the astrological associations I am used to, meant nothing clicked. The book had me intrigued but the cards just didn’t work for me. Last night I decided to look through it again. ![]() I just didn’t know how to work with this deck. Well … after The Shadowland Tarot and Tarot of the Wandering Starat least. In an attempt to change that I decided the Oracle of the Radiant Sun was going to be my next review and it was. In fact I found myself thinking about options I could have added to my collection instead. Unfortunately though, when it arrived and I had the chance to flick through it, I did so without any great enthusiasm. The fact that The Moon Oracle, also by Caroline Smith and John Astrop, was one of my earliest decks gave me the final nudge. Eventually, for reasons I can’t entirely explain, I decided to purchase it anyway. Having seen Oracle of the Radiant Sun on several occasions I became more and more curious about it.
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