Jude Buffum and Paul Kepple, Housewives Tarot: A Domestic Divination Kit with Deck and Instruction Book. Philadelphia, PA: Quirk Books, 2004. ISBN: 9781931686990. (link to publisher)
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The High Priestess-IV |
I first used this deck in July 2025. The deck kit comes in a box in the style of a recipe box with a small instruction book and the 78-card deck. Inside the box, as I understand it, it should have dividers as you do in recipe boxes. I got my deck secondhand, and the dividers were missing. Still, I got the complete deck and book, so I am good to go. I also got it at a good price in the days before used bookstores got wise to cartomancy's popularity and starting jacking up prices for collectors. But I digress.
The small book is arranged as follows:
- The Legend of the Mystical Housewives Tarot. A cute little story where Marlene Weatherbee reveals how Tarot is the secret of her success at home and even in a side business. We also get a note on domestic divination.
- Conducting a reading. This has some instruction on how to read the cards. It offers 4 spreads you can try out.
- The Major Arcana. We get a one-page introduction and then the card entries. Each entry has a small image from the cards, some keywords, and a paragraph of interpretation. For some reason, the deck switches the traditional card order on the Empress, the Emperor, and High Priestess from the traditional card order to Empress-II, Emperor- III, and High Priestess-IV. There is no real reason for it to be honest. I suppose it's a quirk of the deck and its author. The rest of the cards do follow the Rider Waite Smith (RWS) order. The interpretations feature a bit of domestic humor.
- The Minor Arcana. Introduction and entries are pretty much the same as the Major Arcana.
As mentioned, the interpretations have a bit of domestic humor with some vintage elements. Don't be fooled. The meanings can carry serious messages too. The esoteric elements are relatively minimal, and then text as a whole is easy to read. There is a light amusing tone throughout the text. By the way, a couple of the spreads included have 7 to 13 cards, so you get some large spreads to try out.
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King of Pentacles |
On a side note, if you are one of those folks who need or want diversity and/or representation in your decks, look for another deck. This deck is very much the idealized 1950s or so Americana where everyone is white, the man works, the wife is a housewife, etc. It plays with the idea through humor, but there is no "color" here.
The cards measure about 4 1/4 inches by 2 3/4 inches. The cards have a soft matte finish, and they shuffle with relative ease. The card borders are color coded:
- Black = Major Arcana.
- Blue = Cups.
- Red = Swords.
- Yellow = Wands.
- Green = Pentacles.
It is a small detail, but I do appreciate the colored borders. The card back has a simple picnic cloth style, and it is reversible.
Overall, I really like this deck. It reads well, and it has a cheeky and playful sense of humor. I do recommend it, especially for folks who enjoy retro and vintage art.
4 out of 5 stars.
Decks with similar appeal factors:
- The Zombie Tarot, also by Quirk Books.
- Todd Alcott's Tarot decks.
This kit qualifies for the following 2025 Reading Challenge: