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The Dark Wood Tarot by Sasha Graham and artist Abigail Larson — a 78-card deck steeped in gothic fairy tale atmosphere, where classic RWS archetypes are reimagined in a moonlit forest populated by witches, wolves, ravens, and enchanted figures. Larson’s signature dark-romantic illustration style gives each card an atmosphere unlike anything else in the tarot world. Includes a full guidebook by Graham. A standout choice for gothic aesthetic collectors and shadow-work practitioners.
Description:
Quick Specs
Creators: Sasha Graham (concept/author) and Abigail Larson (artist)
Publisher: Llewellyn Publications (2020)
Cards: 78-card fully illustrated deck plus 291-page companion book
Best for: Shadow work, intermediate readers, gothic and dark-aesthetic practitioners
Dark Wood Tarot Deck: Gothic Forest Imagery for Shadow Work
The Dark Wood Tarot deck by Sasha Graham and Abigail Larson is a Rider-Waite-Smith-structured deck set entirely inside a dark, gothic woodland. Larson's visual language draws from 19th-century fairy-tale illustration in the tradition of Arthur Rackham and Edmund Dulac, filtered through her own background in gothic graphic novels. The result is a deck populated by witches, vampires, fae, knights, and forest creatures, all moving through a shadowed world of crooked trees, craggy rocks, and moonlit clearings. The deck ships in a box with a magnetic closure, and the reversible card backs carry gothic scrollwork with the DW monogram at center.
Graham conceived the deck as a tool for shadow work in the Jungian sense, examining disowned and hidden parts of the psyche rather than external dark forces. In the Dark Wood system, a card's shadow meaning stands in place of a traditional reversal: when a card appears reversed, you are invited to examine an aspect of yourself that has been repressed or avoided. A reversed Queen of Wands points to desire turned controlling; a reversed King of Swords becomes the cold, emotionally unavailable thinker. This reframing makes the deck effective for reflective journaling spreads and longer therapeutic readings.
The 291-Page Companion and the Shadow Witch Framework
The companion book structures the Major Arcana as a journey undertaken by the Shadow Witch, a protagonist who steps into the forest and experiences each Key as a vision or lesson. Each Major Arcana card pairs with a maxim, a short guiding statement tying the card's shadow potential to a practical psychological insight. The Minor Arcana is divided into four suits: Wands (legends), Swords (fears), Cups (animals), and Pentacles (the natural world). These thematic frames give the reader a consistent interpretive lens across all 78 cards.
The Dark Wood Tarot fills a specific niche. It differs from the Green Witch Tarot, which shares a woodland setting but carries an empowerment and light-magic orientation rather than a shadow one. It is distinct from the Witches Tarot, which is rooted in Wiccan tradition and lacks the gothic aesthetic. For practitioners who want a dedicated shadow-work tool with substantive written support, this deck-and-book set delivers both. Browse my full tarot deck collection to compare it against other RWS-rooted decks.
How to Use the Dark Wood Tarot
Use this deck and companion book together for shadow-work readings that go beyond standard RWS interpretation.
Set Up and Orient
Place the Dark Wood Tarot and its companion book in their box. The 78-card deck follows the Rider-Waite-Smith structure, so standard spreads work immediately. Read the Shadow Witch introduction before diving into individual cards.
Work the Shadow Meanings
Work the shadow meanings before reversals. Each reversed card in the Dark Wood carries a shadow interpretation, which asks you to examine a disowned part of your psyche rather than a simple contrary reading. Larson's imagery rewards slow looking.
Use the Guidebook as a Companion
Pair a shadow-work spread with the guidebook's Dark Side interpretations. Graham maps each Major Arcana card to a maxim, making the 291-page book a genuine companion rather than a lookup table. Return to it after significant readings.
The Tarot Fellow Standard
I stock the Dark Wood Tarot because it fills a genuine gap: a shadow-work deck with both strong gothic art and substantial written support in one box. Abigail Larson's illustrations are serious, atmospheric work, not shock imagery, and Graham's 291-page guidebook earns its page count with actual interpretive depth. This is a deck for intermediate or advanced readers who want to explore the darker currents of the psyche with a reliable RWS foundation underneath. If you are building out a shadow-work or reflective practice, browse my tarot reading books for companion guides that pair well with this deck.
Frequently Asked Questions
What tarot tradition or school does the Dark Wood Tarot follow?
Dark Wood follows the Rider-Waite-Smith structure, using the same 78-card arrangement and suit names. It replaces reversals with shadow meanings rooted in Jungian analytical psychology and gothic folk tradition.
Is the Dark Wood Tarot good for shadow work?
Yes. Shadow meanings stand in for reversals, asking you to examine a disowned or hidden part of your psyche. Graham structured the whole deck and guidebook around that shadow work framework from the beginning.
How dark is the imagery? Is it suitable for sensitive readers?
Imagery is gothic and dark forest-themed, with vampires, fae, and witches, but it avoids shock-value gore. It is intended for intermediate readers, not young children or those who find dark fairy-tale imagery distressing.
Does the companion book add substantially beyond a standard interpretation?
The 291-page companion by Sasha Graham covers shadow interpretations, spreads, and the Shadow Witch narrative arc for the Major Arcana. It adds meaningfully beyond what a standard RWS guidebook provides.
Dark Wood Tarot Deck and Book — by Sasha Graham & Abigail Larson
Regular price
$31.99
Regular price
Sale price
$31.99
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