Twenty-Two Impressions:
Notes from the Major Arcana
Overview
A poetic new essay collection in which the symbols of Renaissance-era tarot brush up against life in a changing world.
In 2018, author Jessica Friedmann bought her first deck of tarot cards, a facsimile copy of the Tarot de Marseille. This 15th-century deck, with its unfamiliar images, sparked a deep immersion in the art, symbols, myths, and misrepresentations of Renaissance-era tarot.
Over the years that followed, and as tarot became a part of her daily rhythm, Friedmann’s life in rural Australia was touched by floods and by drought, by bushfires and the pandemic, creating an environment in which the only constant was change.
Twenty-Two Impressions: Notes from the Major Arcana uses the Tarot de Marseille as a touchstone for these years, blending historical research, art history, and critical insights with personal reflections. In these essays, Friedmann demonstrates how the cards of the Major Arcana can be used as a lens through which to examine the unexpectedness—and subtle beauty—of 21st-century life.
Details
- Format
- Size
- Extent
- ISBN
- RRP
- Pub date
- Rights held
- Hardback
- 5.1in x 7.8in
- 272 pages
- 9781957363127
- USD$25.00
- 5 November 2024
- World
Praise
“Jessica Friedmann’s essay collection Twenty-Two Impressions sheds novel light on the potential of the tarot to guide how people move through and experience life … [these] essays draw connections between the cards and broader concepts, world events, and personal experiences … Friedmann is an honest narrator who acknowledges and relates to spiritualism skeptics … A misunderstood cultural phenomenon is used as a window to the human experience in the personal essay collection Twenty-Two Impressions.”
“These elliptical essays form a paean to the tarot and its transformative potential … Friedmann’s luminescent prose underscores how the tarot—maligned by some and simply misunderstood by others—can be embraced to access deeper nuance and introspection.”
About the Author
Jessica Friedmann is a writer, editor, and independent scholar. Her first essay collection, Things That Helped, was published by Scribe (2017) and FSG (2018).