âNot just a shimmering guide to our personal cosmologies written in precise and lucid prose, this book is also a devastating collection of cultural-criticism essays cum meditations on the very nature of being alive.ââEmma Copley Eisenberg, author of The Third Rainbow Girl
A soulful exploration of the twelve astrological signs embodied by our living âstarsââfrom divas to philosophers, poets to punksâand the ways they can help us better understand ourselves and each other, from the wildly popular astrology columnist for New York magazineâs The Cut.
Whether you believe in it or not, astrologyâs job has never been to give us a preordained vision of the future, nor to sort us into twelve neat personality types, but to provide the tools and language for delving into our weirdest, best, most thorny contradictions, and for understanding ourselves and each other in our full complexity. The stars and the planets then are more like mirrors that show us who we are, that give us an understanding of how to be and how to move through the world; how certain people do it differently, and what we can learn by studying them.
In Madame Clairevoyantâs Guide to the Stars, Claire Comstock-Gay brings the sky down to Earth and points to our popular âstarsââfrom Aretha Franklin to Mr. Rogers, from poets in Cancer to punk singers in Scorpioâto reveal what the sky has to teach us about being human. In this wise, lyrically written guide, she examines the twelve astrological signs, illuminating the ways each one is more complicated, beautiful, and surprising than you might have been told. Claire suggests that actually itâs okay, and even important, to be a seeker, to hunger for self-knowledge, and if astrology is the vehicle for that inquiry, so be it.
Madame Clairevoyantâs Guide to the Stars offers a clear introduction to the basics and an innovative new framework for creatively using astrology to illuminate our lives on earth. Itâs a road map to our internal world, yes, but Claire also reminds us that itâs still our job to navigate it. Combining both heavenly insights and the earthly wisdom of writers like Cheryl Strayed and Heather Havrilesky and the poetry of Patricia Lockwood and Mary Oliver, Madame Clairevoyantâs Guide to the Stars offers a fresh, profound, and fun way to look at ourselves and others, and perhaps see each more clearly. And in that way, this book is not just beautiful, but transformative.