Lo Scarabeo's Tarot decks have been acclaimed all over the world for originality and quality. With the best Italian and international artists, each Lo Scarabeo deck is an exceptional artistic value.
Commited to developing innovative new decks while preserving the rich tradition of Tarot, Lo Scarabeo continues to be a favorite among collectors and readers.
Llewellyn is the exclusive distributor of Lo Scarabeo products in North America.
Summary:
As dark and mysterious as the mythic world created by H. P.
Lovecraft, the Dark Grimoire Tarot is strongly recommended for
those mature enough and brave enough to examine their darker sides,
and by coming to know and control those aspects of their psyches,
be able to master themselves. This can lead to true maturity and
what Jung called "individuation." A powerful deck that may be
better for personal evolution than for divination.
Review:
Howard Phillips Lovecraft (1890-1937) was a mildly successful
writer of short stories known as "pulp fiction." This was a
designation based on the inexpensive, pocket-sized magazines where
his stories appeared. These small magazines were published on cheap
paper known as "pulp." Today, only a few magazines that were
originally "pulps" remain, one of them being FATE magazine. Most of
the few that survived are now full-size.
Lovecraft was deeply influenced by earlier and contemporary writers
such as Ambrose Bierce and Robert W. Chambers, who not only told a
story, but projected a mood. He eventually developed a style that
featured a mood of horror lying just beyond what we normally see
and hear, horror that is liable to break through into our unknowing
world at any moment. He created an entire other world populated by
evil powerful beings intent on taking over the Earth. According to
the stories, people would try to contact these beings who
eventually became part of what was known as the "Cthulhu Mythos."
Lovecraft even invented a mythical book that supposedly revealed
the secrets of the beings, giving it the title of a book he had
created in his childhood, The Necronomicon.
Lovecraft's stories are spooky, but on a literary basis he was no
Shakespeare. He wasn't even a Poe. But two things occurred that
gave his stories extra life. First, because he wasn't all that
successful, he took many jobs ghostwriting stories for other people
(he wrote one for Houdini). He included aspects of the Cthulhu
Mythos in those stories. Second, he was part of a group of pulp
writers that included Clark Ashton Smith, Robert E. Howard, Frank
Belknap Long, Robert Bloch, and others. They would, on occasion,
use aspects of the Mythos in their own stories. It became a sort of
running gag between them, going to far as even using each other's
names, in disguise, in their stories. If you read many of these
stories from different authors, and saw these similar names and
characters, might you not assume that there might be something real
in all of this? Indeed, for a time, used booksellers were
frequently approached with requests for copies of the fictional
Necronomicon. And when there is a demand, someone will eventually
supply what was demanded.
By the end of the 20th century, several versions of The
Necronomicon had appeared. The most popular one blended a bit of
Crowley, Sumerian magick, and quotes from Lovecraft into a supposed
magickal system that was seemingly usable...or at least it was
believed usable by the people who purchased the inexpensive mass
market pocket edition that became available.
Meanwhile, there had been during the 1960s-1980s a veritable
explosion of interest in the works of Aleister Crowley. Quietly,
almost out of nowhere, came a British writer named Kenneth Grant
who claimed to have Crowley's real secrets. Over the years his
writings blended some concepts of Crowley with those of Lovecraft.
This helped trigger a new interest in Lovecraft not as a fantacist,
but as an unconscious revealer of actual occult secrets. The
Cthulhu Mythos was alive, and the various versions of The
Necronomicon were its Bible.
Eventually, Donald Tyson and Anne Stokes did a Tarot deck based on
these stories, The Necronomicon Tarot. But just as there are many
versions of The Necronomicon, so, too, would there be multiple
decks based on that vision. After spending a long time fascinated
by the stories, artist and designer Michele Penco created a Tarot
along this line, too. In other parts of the world it is known as
the "Tarot of the Necronomicon." In English it is called the Dark
Grimoire Tarot.
In actuality, it might be more appropriate to call this deck the
"Lovecraft Tarot." A cameo of his image is on the back of each
card. Or perhaps it might be best called the "Cthulhu Mythos
Tarot." The images are taken from many of Lovecraft's stories that
make up the mythos. For example, the Two of Swords is clearly based
on "The Music of Erich Zann," a violinist who must play to keep
horrifying demons at bay. The Three of Pentacles illustrates
"Pickman's Model" and the reason his art was so horrifyingly
realistic. The Ten of Swords is obviously from "The Dunwich
Horror," showing a twin that was much more of his terrifying father
than it was of his mother.
On the other hand, calling it the Dark Grimoire Tarot is also valid
on several accounts. First, the colors--mostly grays and sepia
tones with a few very muted tints--are dark. Second, the imagery is
also dark. The RWS tradition shows the Hanged Man hanging by his
ankle and in a meditative or even ecstatic state. Here, the
interpretation is quite literal, showing a man who has been so
horrified by what he read in the Necronomicon that he has hanged
himself in his dismal garret.
To match the colors, the art itself is very simplistic and muted,
no photographic realism as found in some decks today. This is
certainly appropriate as it gives the flavor of some of the art
found in the old pulp magazines. In my opinion this simplicity is a
good thing. With muted, simplistic images you are forced to fill in
the concepts with your own ideas. And that marks the true strength
of this deck.
According to the psychologist Carl Jung, we each have a positive
side and a negative side. He called that dark side "the shadow." He
believed that part of human development is understanding and
accepting that we each have a dark side, and then choosing to
harness its power while eliminating its negative and antisocial
aspects. He called this process "individuation."
Today, however, most people try to avoid facing their shadow.
Everything has to be made 100% safe and "nicey-nicey" or someone is
going to sue! Unfortunately, our world is not 100% safe and
nicey-nicey. Submerging or ignoring the shadow doesn't eliminate
it. Rather, it allows it to fester and grow in the dark until, in
some people, it explodes in acts we term "evil."
One way to prevent this is to face our shadow and come to terms
with it. This deck, with its darkness and incomplete imagery, is
absolutely perfect for allowing us to work on this process. This is
a deck for the brave and mature. It is haunting and incredibly
deep. Ffor personal growth this deck can be an important tool. The
Little White Booklet (LWB) adds that this deck is "a key that can
open forgotten doors in the darkest corners of the psyche, those
doors hidden in the shadows and engulfed in spider webs. Opening
those doors can mean gaining knowledge of our own fears and
recognizing our own dark side, learning how it can balance our
whole being."
Although the deck follows the basic format of the RWS, the
symbolism of the Major Arcana is completely different, at best
giving only implications of the RWS. The meanings of the cards may
seem unfamiliar to you, as the Cups represent dreams, the Pentacles
represent shadows, the Wands represent lights and creativity, and
the Swords are demons. Most often they do not show the tool of
their suit, although you will find each card labeled. Each suit is
a type of separate grimoire. The meanings of these cards are based
on the imagery and not necessarily the traditional RWS
interpretations.
Therefore, comparing this deck to other Tarot decks is simply
impossible. It is its own creature. Perhaps, like Lovecraft's "Evil
Old Ones," this has just been lurking just outside of our line of
sight and is only seen through hints in our peripheral vision
during our darkest nightmares, nightmares so real that when we wake
we make sure that the windows are closed and the doors are
locked.
The Little White Booklet includes a five-card "Magic Pentagram"
spread. And since it it modeled after the RWS deck, you can use it
for other spreads, too. Don't be surprised, however, if while
giving a reading you slip into self-examination and confrontation
with your own shadow. This deck is strongly recommended for
personal meditative and spiritual work. However, as Lovecraft might
have advised, don't try using it when you're alone--or when you
think you're alone--and in the dark.
Deck Attributes
Name of deck: Dark Grimoire Tarot
Publisher: Llewellyn
ISBN: 9780738713847
Creator's name: Michele Penco
Brief biography of creators: Penco is an art designer living in
Pisa, Italy, who is fascinated by all things Lovecraft.
Name of accompanying book/booklet: Dark Grimoire Tarot
Number of pages of booklet: 64 (14 in English)
Authors of booklet: Giovanni Pelosini
Brief biography of author: Pelosini is a Tarot artist and
author.
Available in a boxed kit?: No
Magical Uses: Shadow work meditation, self-analysis,
individuation
Artistic Style: Illustration
Original Medium: Pencil or chalk (?)
Theme: H.P. Lovecraft's Cthluhu Mythos
Tarot, Divination Deck, Other: Tarot
Does it follow Rider-Waite-Smith Standard?: Yes, in name if not in
symbolism.
Does it have extra cards?: No
Does it have alternate names for Major Arcana cards?: No
Does it have alternate names for Minor Arcana suits?: No
Does it have alternate names for the Court Cards?: No
Why was deck created?: "This deck of Tarot cards was inspired by
the dream worlds of fantasy literature, by grimoires, whether real
or imaginary, by the nightmares that they have generated and
continue to generate in the depths of the subconscious.
Book suggestions for Tarot beginners and this deck: Any
introductory book on the Tarot. Books (collections of short
stories) by H.P. Lovecraft.
Book suggestions for experienced Tarot users and this deck: Books
by Lovecraft, Kenneth Grant, and critiques of the Lovecraft/Occult
linkage.
Alternative decks you might like: Necronomicon Tarot from Donald
Tyson and Anne Stokes and The Shadow Tarot by Linda Falorio and
Fred Fowler.
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