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An Occult Guide to the Tarot by Travis McHenry is a hardcover book that delivers advanced esoteric interpretations of the tarot, grounding each card in Kabbalistic, angelic, and ceremonial magical tradition. Ideal for serious practitioners seeking to deepen their understanding beyond conventional meanings — this is tarot for the dedicated occultist.
Description:
Quick Specs
Brand: Rockpool Publishing
Type: Hardcover reference book
Size/Quantity: 272 pages, over 300 illustrations, printed in black and red
Best for: Intermediate to advanced tarot readers ready to study the occult systems behind the cards
The Occult Architecture Behind the Cards
Most tarot instruction stops at the surface: here is what the Three of Swords means, here is how to read a Celtic Cross. Travis McHenry's An Occult Guide to the Tarot begins where that instruction ends. McHenry, one of the most prolific occultists working today and creator of the internationally best-selling Occult Tarot deck, pulls back the imagery to reveal the Kabbalistic, astrological, and ceremonial magic systems that the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn deliberately encoded into the 78-card structure at the turn of the twentieth century.
The book covers both Major and Minor Arcana in depth, mapping each card to its Tree of Life placement, Hebrew letter, ruling planet or zodiacal sign, and Golden Dawn elemental attribution. The numbered pip cards are traced to their Sephiroth, and the court cards to their elemental worlds within the Kabbalistic fourfold structure. For any reader who has ever wondered why the Four of Cups carries the weight it does, or why the Tower is placed on the path between Mars and Aries rather than elsewhere, this book provides the answer.
From Divination Game to Ceremonial Tool
McHenry opens with a historical arc that traces the tarot from its origins as a card game for the Italian nobility in the fifteenth century through its transformation into a full ceremonial instrument for ritual magicians. That history is not padding: it explains why certain cards carry symbolism that looks decorative to casual readers but is, in fact, a precise magical instruction. Understanding that lineage changes how you sit with the cards.
This is a hardcover art object as much as a study text. It is printed with special black and intense red ink, carries deluxe finishes, and features over 300 full-color illustrations. The book makes a legitimate reference shelf presence alongside Regardie, Dion Fortune, or Paul Foster Case, not because it imitates them but because it distills their collective contribution for a modern reader and pairs that scholarship with McHenry's own extensive practical experience.
Who This Book Is For
This is not a beginner's guide. If you are still learning which cards belong to which suit, start with a foundational deck and guidebook first, then return here. This book is written for readers who already navigate a spread with confidence and want to understand why the symbols work rather than only how to interpret them. It is also valuable for practitioners of Western ceremonial magic who want to integrate tarot into their ritual work using a properly structured correspondence system. You can explore more in my tarot and divination books.
How to Use An Occult Guide to the Tarot
How to integrate this reference text into an active tarot practice.
Identify your knowledge gaps
Before opening this book, do a few readings with your current deck and note the cards where you rely on memorized keywords. These are the cards whose deeper occult architecture this book will illuminate for you.
Study the correspondences chapter by chapter
McHenry walks through astrological, Kabbalistic, and Golden Dawn assignments card by card. Work one Major Arcana card per session, cross-referencing your own deck so each page translates directly into your reading practice.
Apply the occult layer to a live reading
Pull a three-card spread and, instead of relying on intuition alone, consult the book for each card's deeper symbolic layer. Notice how the Kabbalistic path or planetary ruler reframes what you thought you already knew about the card.
The Tarot Fellow Standard
I stock this book because there is a clear gap in most tarot libraries between "how to read" and "why it works." McHenry fills that gap with scholarly rigor and real occult practice behind him. The production quality, the 300-plus illustrations, and the depth of the correspondence system make it a reference you return to rather than read once. If you are building a serious practice, this belongs on the same shelf as your best deck. Browse my full tarot and divination collection to find the deck this book was made to companion.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is An Occult Guide to the Tarot suitable for beginners?
This book is written for readers who already know the 78-card structure and basic meanings. If you are new to tarot, build that foundation first, then return to McHenry's text when you are ready to go deeper into the symbolism.
What occult systems does the book cover?
The book covers Kabbalistic Tree of Life correspondences, astrological assignments from the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, numerological layers across the Minor Arcana, and the ceremonial and ritual uses of the cards in Western magic traditions.
Does this book work with any tarot deck?
Yes. McHenry roots his analysis in the Rider-Waite-Smith symbolic language, which underlies most contemporary decks. Readers using the Thoth, Marseille, or other decks will find some divergence but the core correspondence system applies broadly.
Is this a tarot deck or a reference book?
This is a 272-page hardcover reference book with over 300 illustrations, printed in black and red. It does not include a deck. It is designed as a companion to any deck you already own, explaining the occult reasoning behind each card's design.
An Occult Guide to the Tarot by Travis McHenry — Hardcover