The Tarot
A guest post by Richard Long
Laura gave me my first tarot deck. It was a Crowley. A lot of people get creeped out by Crowley decks, much as they would have been creeped out by Crowley, I imagine. He called himself ‘The Great Beast.’ To me, he seemed more like a big joke.
“Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law!”
Stop it, you’re killing me.
***
You just read the opening lines of The Bone King, a prequel to The Book of Paul.
They happen to be true. Laura gave me my first deck. I still have it
and use it. In fact, I’ll be using it shortly to provide Skype tarot
readings for two lucky winners of my Whirlwind Blog Tour. I’m looking
forward to the readings. The winners? I suppose that depends on which
cards come up.Actually, I don’t give scary tarot readings, I just write about scary tarot readings. People have enough fear and stress in their lives without me throwing more gas on the flames. Besides, the three scariest trump cards–The Hanged Man, Death and The Tower–can all be interpreted in very unscary ways. Most of the time.
William, the narrator of The Book of Paul, lives in the East Village/Alphabet City of New York in the years before gentrification made it a much less fun and frightening place. He makes a living doing tarot and numerology readings, same as the author did at the time. Like me, he is also a collector, but that’s where the similarities end. He collects ancient occult codices, some covered in human skin. He collects other things that are even more…disturbing.
The mythology of The Book of Paul is based largely on my very unique (so unique you’ll never see it anywhere else) interpretation of the twenty-two trump cards of the tarot. As William endeavors to unravel Paul’s nefarious intentions, he discovers an arrangement of the trumps that reveals the true story being told. In the following excerpt from one of William’s journal entries, Paul congratulates William on his discovery (which is not revealed, so no spoiler alert!) and rewards his efforts with a very special gift to add to his collection, and the promise of an even greater prize.
A fabulous tarot reading from Richard Long? A Kindle Fire?
No, William isn’t as lucky as three of you wonderful readers.
He’s about to have his very first look at The Book of Paul, a gift that comes with a very hefty price tag.
***
“You’ve done exceptionally well here,” Paul said, “but
you’re never gonna get to the bottom of this no matter how many of those
old books you poke your nose into.”
“And that’s because…”
“For starters, those writings were deliberately intended
to disguise the truth in countless metaphors and scrambled codes to
keep the idiots at bay. They’ve been translated, and re-translated back
into the original demotic, Coptic or Greek countless times, every scribe
adding his own pontifical touch in his glorious interpretation. Of the
more accurate writings, there’s more missing from the tracts than what
remains, as you’ve seen in the Drivel of Mary. You’ve about as much luck
hitting pay dirt in those dustbins as those literalist born-agains have
of seeing the Rapture. However, I have a gift for you that should prove
far more enlightening, if you apply yourself with half the dedication
of these research efforts.”
He reached deeply into his pocket and told me to close
my eyes. “Don’t go using yer second sight and spoil the surprise.” I
nodded and felt him place a large rectangular object in my left hand.
“Okay, open ’em.”
It was a tarot deck. Older than any I’d seen. The
paintings were incredibly detailed and absolutely exquisite. I turned
them over one by one, The Hero, The Herald, The Oracle—all the trumps
labeled with Paul’s titles. “These are amazing!” I said, awed and yes,
flattered by his incredible gift. I had a hard time spitting it out, but
I managed to say, “Thank you.”
“You’ve earned it,” he grunted, taking the cards back
before I had a chance to look at the rest of them, setting the cards
down gently on the table. “But don’t stay up too late gazing at them.
This deck can be quite…entrancing.”
“Is there something else I should know about it?” I asked apprehensively.
“Indeed, there is. Get a good night’s sleep and meet me
in the chapel tomorrow. I’m bumping you up to the advanced class, so
make sure your eyes are bright and your head is clear. You’ve earned a
little taste of the Gospel according to Paul.”
_____________________________________________________
As part of this special promotional extravaganza sponsored by Novel Publicity, the price of the Book of Paul eBook edition is just 99 cents this week. What’s more, by purchasing this fantastic book at an incredibly low price, you can enter to win many awesome prizes. The prizes include a Kindle Fire, $300 in Amazon gift cards, 5 autographed copies of the book, and a look into your future through a free tarot reading performed by the author.
All the info you need to win one of these amazing prizes is RIGHT HERE. Remember, winning is as easy as clicking a button or leaving a blog comment–easy to enter; easy to win!
To win the prizes:
- Purchase your copy of The Book of Paul for just 99 cents
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About the author:
Richard Long is the author of The Book of Paul and the forthcoming young-adult fantasy series The Dream Palace. He lives in Manhattan with his wonderful wife, two amazing children and wicked black cat, Merlin. Visit Richard on his website, Twitter, Facebook, or GoodReads.
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