Horoscope Guide – October 2019

(WallPaper) #1

8 Horoscope Guide


Book


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Book


Reviews


by Kenneth Irving


A


t a certain point in my long
career of doing mostly what
I am doing now, by which I
mean either writing about astrology
or editing what someone else has
written about astrology, I have
picked up a few favorites along the
way, both individual astrologers
and the books those astrologers
have written. I suppose that working
on the article in this issue on the
Saturn-Neptune sextile has made me
a little nostalgic since it included
quite a bit about Marc Edmund
Jones. It did bring up thoughts of a
time in my life when I
could be seen walking
around on a campus
with a book bag filled
with notebooks and
books related to things
I ought to be doing,
yet always including a
book or two related to
things I was actually
doing.
It occurred to me
while working on that
article that it would
be nice to bring some
classic authors and the

books they wrote out of the dusty
dark corners where time had hidden
them, and bring them into the light
of day, at least for a paragraph or
two. Despite the fact that we live
in a world that moves along at the
speed of light, and which has gone
through several waves from interest
to disinterest about astrology over
the decades since, say, Jones and
Elsie Wheeler did their experiment
to produce the Sabian Symbols,
it is interesting to take a look
occasionally along a timeline from
there to here.
One of the books
I remember carrying
around and reading
often on a night job
when the foreman was
not around was written
by British astrologer
Ronald C. Davison: a
175-page tome simply
titled Astrology. The
contents were just as
unassuming and straight–
forward in that they
covered only those
basics I just mentioned,
but Davison had a gift
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