Ciro Marchetti (artist) and Lee Bursten (book author), Tarot Decoratif. Stamford, CT: U.S. Games Systems, 2021. ISBN: 9781646710478. (Link to publisher)
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La Papesse-II card |
Lee Bursten writes the companion book. Ciro Marchetti writes a foreword for the book discussing the deck and sharing some artist notes on selected cards. The rest of the book goes over The Triumphs (Major Arcana), the pip cards (cards 1-10 in each suit), and the court cards. The book may feel a bit inconsistent. As often happens, you get a good amount of information on the Major Arcana. The material for the court cards is relatively minimal, a few keywords per card. The pip card entries are better in terms of content.
Bursten emphasizes some numerology and suit keywords to figure out the meanings of the pip cards. Unlike RWS, some memorization of suit and number keywords is essential to read a Marseilles and/or non-illustrated deck. If this interests you, and you are willing to put in some work you can learn the system. The overall system is relatively well explained in the book. Bursten also includes a sample reading to help you learn. In the cards Marchetti added small images, vignettes, from RWS to the pip cards which can help with learning the Marseilles system, giving you hints.
I started my Tarot journey with a basic Marseilles deck. I then switched to an RWS clone; by coincidence that clone was also a Marchetti deck: his Gilded Tarot. That switch helped my cartomancy craft flourish. I always wanted to go back and relearn or fully learn Marseilles. I am not letting those pips be the boss of me. For me, this book and deck work as a nice transition deck. If you want to learn Marseilles Tarot, but you need some hints, this deck can help. The book gives you the basics in simple language. Where some Marseilles Tarot books may appear a bit too esoteric, the companion book here gives you enough to start learning. Once you read the companion book, you can decide to read other books and learn more at your pace. For example, I have read Ben-Dov's The Marseille Tarot Revealed (link to my review). It is a good book but a bit dense at times. Now that I have read Bursten's book here and worked with the deck, I feel more confident. I can go back and re-read Ben-Dov's book and maybe start working with a basic Marseilles deck again. We'll see how that goes.
The cards naturally are the reason to get this deck. Marchetti does an excellent job not just depicting the
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Two of Coins (Deniers) card |
The cards measure about 4 3/4 inches by 3 inches. The card art has a black border that works well. The card back art is reversible. The card stock is not too thin. It has a very soft glossy finish, and the cards shuffle with some ease.
Overall, this is a beautiful deck, and I am glad to have it. This is one I would buy a back up copy. I will be using it again down the road, and I will use it to help me study Marseilles Tarot further.
5 out of 5 stars.
This kit qualifies for the following 2025 Reading Challenge: