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Tarot Fellow

Tarot Magick by Lindsay Squire — Witch of the Forest's Guide

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    Short description:

    Tarot Magick by Lindsay Squire — subtitled The Witch of the Forest’s Guide, this illustrated book bridges tarot reading with hands-on witchcraft, helping readers weave spell work and ritual into their card practice. Squire’s warm, nature-rooted approach makes it ideal for modern seekers looking to deepen their relationship with the cards and the magical world around them.

    Description:

    Quick Specs

    • Author: Lindsay Squire (The Witch of the Forest)
    • Type: Paperback beginner's guide
    • Series: The Witch of the Forest's Guide to..., Book 4
    • Best for: New tarot readers, beginner witches, self-development practitioners

    Tarot Magick: Discover Yourself Through the Cards

    Lindsay Squire, known to a large social media audience as The Witch of the Forest, built her following by making witchcraft genuinely accessible rather than intentionally obscure. Tarot Magick, the fourth book in her guide series, carries that philosophy into the world of tarot. It's written explicitly as a starting point, designed for someone who has just picked up their first deck and wants to learn the cards, develop their intuition, and eventually use those cards as part of a lived practice. The self-discovery angle is central from the first chapter.

    The book covers all 78 cards with upright and reversed meanings, including astrological correspondences, numerological associations, and the elemental framework underlying each suit. Squire uses illustrations from her own Tarot Magick deck, designed with illustrator Viki Lester, as visual anchors throughout. The deck's imagery is rooted in Rider-Waite-Smith symbolism, so readers can apply the interpretations to virtually any RWS-based deck they already own. A foldout jacket panel doubles as a three-card spread layout. Browse my tarot and divination books for companion titles that go deeper on specific topics Squire introduces.

    Spells, Rituals, and the Grimoire Section

    What separates Tarot Magick from a standard card meaning reference is the grimoire material Squire draws from her personal practice. She includes tarot-based spells, rituals for self-love and intention-setting, journaling prompts that use daily card draws as reflection tools, and tips for incorporating tarot into a broader witchcraft practice. This is the self-development thread that runs through the whole book: the cards are not just a divination tool but a mirror for understanding your own patterns, needs, and blind spots.

    Squire also covers practical basics that newer books sometimes skip: how to choose and cleanse a deck, what yes-or-no readings actually involve, how time appears in a reading, and how to blend numerology and astrology into interpretations. It's a well-organized introduction to tarot as a complete practice rather than a collection of card definitions. Pair it with a deck from my tarot decks and divination collection to put the guidance into immediate use.

    How to Use Tarot Magick by Lindsay Squire

    A guided path from opening the book to building an active tarot practice.

    1. Start With the Foundations

      Start with Part One, which covers how to choose a deck, care for it, and establish a reading practice. Squire introduces the Major and Minor Arcana, element associations, and numerology before asking you to pull a single card.

    2. Learn the Card Meanings

      Move through the card meanings section, using Squire's illustrations to anchor each card's symbolism. She covers upright and reversed meanings, astrological correspondences, and the yes-or-no answers each card traditionally suggests.

    3. Apply the Grimoire Practices

      Once comfortable with the cards, explore the grimoire section. Squire provides tarot-based spells, journaling prompts, and self-love rituals that turn a reading practice into an active tool for personal understanding and growth.

    The Tarot Fellow Standard

    I carry this because Squire earns her following through clarity and consistency, not hype. The self-discovery framing is genuine and useful, not just a marketing angle, and the practical grimoire content gives the book a reason to exist beyond simply cataloging card meanings. If you're looking for an entry-level tarot book that will actually get used rather than shelved, this is a strong candidate.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Tarot Magick by Lindsay Squire good for complete beginners?

    It's designed as an entry point for new tarot readers and anyone new to witchcraft. Squire covers card meanings, spreads, and spellwork in an accessible style, so readers with zero background can begin a real practice.

    Which tarot deck does the book use for its illustrations?

    The book uses Squire's own Tarot Magick deck as its primary visual reference, illustrated by Viki Lester. All interpretations align with Rider-Waite-Smith symbolism, so the guidance works with any RWS-based deck you own.

    Does Tarot Magick include spells and rituals?

    Yes. Squire includes recipes, rituals, and tips taken from her personal grimoire. The book shows how to incorporate tarot draws into spells, daily self-reflection, and a journaling practice oriented around self-discovery.

    Is this part of a series, and does reading order matter?

    This is the fourth and final book in the Witch of the Forest's Guide to... series. The other titles are Natural Magick, Earth Magick, and Astrology Magick. Each volume stands alone, so you can read them in any order.

    Front cover of Tarot Magick by Lindsay Squire showing forest witch illustration
    Back cover of Tarot Magick by Lindsay Squire with book description and author bio
    Interior spread of Tarot Magick book showing tarot card spread layouts and ritual instructions
    Interior pages of Tarot Magick by Lindsay Squire featuring botanical illustrations
    Detail page from Tarot Magick book with spell and ritual guidance for practitioners
    Sample chapter page from Tarot Magick by Lindsay Squire with tarot reading techniques