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Tarot Fellow

Dark Goddess Oracle — 48-Card Deck by Meiklejohn-Free & Peters

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Dark Goddess Oracle by Barbara Meiklejohn-Free and Flavia Kate Peters — 48 cards featuring fierce and ancient goddesses from world traditions including Inanna, Baba Yaga, Maman Brigitte, and Kali. Ideal for shadow work, reclaiming personal power, and honoring the wild feminine. Published by Rockpool, with a companion guidebook explaining each deity’s mythology and message.

Description:

Quick Specs

  • Brand: Rockpool Publishing
  • Type: Oracle deck with guidebook
  • Size/Quantity: 48 silver-gilded cards, 106-page guidebook, boxed kit 4 x 6 inches
  • Best for: Shadow work, fierce feminine archetypes, multi-tradition goddess practice

Shadow, Sovereignty, and the Dark Feminine Across Cultures

The Dark Goddess Oracle by Barbara Meiklejohn-Free, Flavia Kate Peters, and Kate Osborne brings together 48 fierce and shadow goddesses from across the world's spiritual traditions into a single working deck. Kali, Hecate, Lilith, the Morrigan, Sekhmet, Coatlicue, and dozens more appear here not as warnings or cautionary figures but as sources of raw power, transformation, and truth. This is the oracle for practitioners who have grown past the comforting archetypes and want to work with the aspects of the divine feminine that demand something real.

The Witches' Kitchen Oracle, also by Meiklejohn-Free and Peters, is rooted in the hearth, the kitchen garden, and the warm magic of domestic tradition. The Dark Goddess Oracle is its shadow counterpart, stripping away comfort entirely. Where the Witches' Kitchen nourishes, the Dark Goddess Oracle confronts. The 48 goddesses depicted here are those associated with death, destruction, sovereignty over fate, the underworld, and the fierce protection that only arises from total honesty about darkness. The gilded cards and boxed kit format match the gravity of what's inside.

Guidebook, Structure, and Practice

The 106-page guidebook covers each of the 48 goddesses with context about her tradition, her shadow qualities, and specific guidance for working with the card. The authors bring genuine practitioner knowledge to this material: Meiklejohn-Free is a Scottish shaman and herbalist, Peters is a witch and pagan author, and Osborne contributes her background in goddess spirituality. The combined voice in the guidebook is neither fluffy nor academic, it's direct and aimed at practitioners who are ready to do real shadow work rather than surface-level affirmations.

The silver-gilded edges catch light in a way that suits this deck well, giving the cards a presence that matches the fierce deities depicted on them. If you're building a collection of oracle decks and want one that addresses the shadow dimension directly rather than gesturing at it politely, this boxed kit belongs on that shelf.

How to Use Dark Goddess Oracle by Meiklejohn-Free and Peters

This oracle is designed for shadow work, not light readings. These three steps help you engage with its depth rather than skimming the surface.

  1. Bring a Real Shadow Question

    Start with a question rooted in shadow: what am I avoiding, what pattern keeps repeating, or what aspect of myself have I rejected? The Dark Goddess Oracle responds most powerfully when you bring a real challenge rather than a general inquiry.

  2. Sit With the Image Before Reading

    Draw one card and sit with the goddess depicted before reading the guidebook. Let the image surface whatever it surfaces. Dark goddesses often provoke discomfort on first contact, and that discomfort is frequently the message itself emerging.

  3. Journal the Shadow Theme

    Read the guidebook entry and identify the specific shadow theme the card addresses. Journal for at least ten minutes on how that theme appears in your current life. The deck's value compounds over repeated sessions rather than single pulls.

The Tarot Fellow Standard

I stock the Dark Goddess Oracle because it fills a gap that softer goddess decks leave wide open. Most oracle decks that invoke the goddess archetype stay with the luminous, the nurturing, or the mildly mysterious. This one doesn't. Meiklejohn-Free, Peters, and Osborne have built something with real teeth, a deck that takes the shadow feminine seriously across traditions rather than cherry-picking the approachable faces. For practitioners who want to go further into the dark and need a structured resource for doing so, you'll find supporting material in my tarot and divination books section as well.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many cards are in the Dark Goddess Oracle?

The Dark Goddess Oracle is a 48-card silver-gilded deck in a boxed kit measuring 4 by 6 inches. It includes a 106-page guidebook covering all 48 goddesses drawn from multiple world pantheons and traditions.

Who created the Dark Goddess Oracle?

The authors are Barbara Meiklejohn-Free, Flavia Kate Peters, and Kate Osborne, three British practitioners with backgrounds in shamanism, witchcraft, and goddess spirituality spanning multiple traditions.

How is the Dark Goddess Oracle different from the Witches' Kitchen Oracle?

The two decks share authors but are entirely different in content and purpose. Witches' Kitchen focuses on hearth and culinary magic. Dark Goddess Oracle focuses on shadow work, fierce feminine archetypes, and transformation through darkness.

Does the Dark Goddess Oracle include goddesses from multiple traditions?

Yes. The deck presents goddesses from Egyptian, Greek, Norse, Celtic, Hindu, and other pantheons, positioning each as an aspect of the unified shadow feminine rather than treating any single tradition as primary or superior.

Four Dark Goddess Oracle cards featuring goddesses Inanna, Baba Yaga, Maman Brigitte, and Redemption with ornate dark artwork by Meiklejohn-Free and Peters.