Happy Halloween/Samhain for 2025!

Happy Halloween and Samhain for 2025! Traditionally, it’s a time for spooky pop culture and horror movie marathons… But also a celebration of the ancestors and embrace of the night.

Traditionally, Halloween is a time for spooky pop culture and horror movie marathons… Halloween and Samhain are also a celebration of the ancestors and an embrace of the night.

It’s known as the time when the veil drops – though you’re also welcome to drop candy, mics, or beats to celebrate this special time of the year!

Happy Halloween and Samhain for 2025!

Download more Halloween postcards at The Public Domain Review/Halloween Postcards Collection over here.

Tarot time? Follow tarot readers Melanie Marquis and Raven Digitalis at their official website.

Music instead? Follow Flash.Wrldwide/Lil2Hood at Linktree.

A Selection of Great Bridge Links!

Bridge is a 13-card, trick-taking game that draws its origins from the earlier game of whist. If you’re looking for something to read, here are some articles about the game from Great Bridge Links!

Bridge is a 13-card, trick-taking game that draws its origins from the earlier game of whist. If you’re looking for something to read, here are some articles about the game from Great Bridge Links!

Great Bridge Links

Click around the site for more about the rules of bridge, bridge strategies and where to find active face-to-face or online games.

Bridge, Banter, and Behind-the-Scenes with “Sorry Partner”

“Sorry, Partner” invites listeners into the engaging world of bridge, featuring conversations with expert players, heartfelt stories from the table, and a behind-the-scenes look at the game’s global community. Click here to read more.

Bridge Unleashed: Where Spock Plays Bridge

What happens when Spock from Star Trek picks up a 13-card bridge hand? Bridge Unleashed brings fictional icons to the bridge table with humour, strategy, and cultural flair in their standout series Mind Meld. Click here to read more.

The Devil and the Playing Card Deck

Playing cards have long been linked to superstition, the occult, and even the devil himself. Beyond folklore, playing cards also had real dangers – Victorian-era decks contained arsenic-based pigments that posed a health risk to collectors. Click here to read more.

Important Real-Life Bridge Questions We Asked RealBridge

Online bridge is alive with possibility, with the game getting fresh players and spectators on a daily basis. This interview dates back to the start of the RealBridge online platform, which has certainly grown since then! Click here to read more.

Review: The Rainbow Moon Tarot by Samantha West (Sam Rook)

The Rainbow Moon Tarot by Samantha West (Rook) is an unexpected gem of a tarot deck, and one that keeps classic Rider-Waite-Smith images without their gendered focus.

Its description says that it’s meant for “inclusivity, whimsy, and humour.” However, it’s also meant for modern readings that embrace they/them pronouns and LGBTQI+ readings.

The retailer, though mainstream, only had one shelf labelled ESOTERIC and a very limited selection. The Stranger Things Tarot, The Friends Tarot, and The Meryl Streep Tarot definitely wasn’t what I was looking for… Eventually, I found The Rainbow Moon Tarot on the bottom shelf between Draw Your Own Tarot Deck and an Astrology Kit.

The Rainbow Moon Tarot does away with heavily gendered traditional tarot imagery: The High Priestess becomes Divine, and the Empress is expressed as The Creator. Simultaneously the deck still keeps some of the classic Rider-Waite-Smith images so you’re not lost for meanings if that’s the deck style you’re used to.

Cards-backs contain a cosmic, rainbow eye (because why not?), and the sides they are a-glowin’ like special edition foil trading cards. It’s a cool detail. As a tip, give your cards a quick corn flour dusting and wipe them to give cards the glide you’re looking for – new decks, including this one, tend to feel like they’ve been glued together for the first while.

There are some surprises that you’ll have to get used to, like the suit of Crystals – and the deck using Page, Knight, Chancellor and Warden instead.

There’s a 144 page guidebook, too. Definitions are thoroughly explained and the differences between traditional imagery and Rainbow Moon are duly noted.

Art easily reminds of animated web shows, and in a good way.

Samantha West is an illustrator and artist, and also created the Cosmic C*nt Tarot. Some of her creations have been launched via crowd-funding – including The Peony Clown Tarot (ongoing) and Bellus the Sweet: The Plushie Demon.

Book Review: ‘Baphomet: History, Ritual & Magic’

Baphomet: History, Ritual & Magic of the World’s Most Famous Occult Icon by Michael Osiris Snuffin is a comprehensive analysis of the historic and modern Baphomet figure.

Baphomet: History, Ritual & Magic of the World’s Most Famous Occult Icon by Michael Osiris Snuffin is a comprehensive analysis of the historic and modern Baphomet figure. The figure of Baphomet has often been misunderstood and misinterpreted—and historically, this book sets the record straight. The author’s tone is unpretentious and gets to the point, and there’s a lot of information in the book without it feeling academically heavy or purely occult.

The book is split up into three sections: history, ritual, and magic. The first two sections focus on the origin and evolution of the famous (or infamous) Baphomet figure. Snuffin discusses the contributions of Eliphas Lévi, Aleister Crowley, and Peter Carroll—but also expands on this with modern information that you aren’t going to find elsewhere. While it does discuss the Baphomet of the Church of Satan and The Satanic Temple, Baphomet isn’t overtly geared towards Satanism (either theistic or atheistic).

The third part is focused purely on occultism and ritual, including information on magickal workings and useful correspondence tables. Snuffin recommends a practical, minimalist approach to ritual using what works for the individual, and practitioners are encouraged to visualize and connect with Baphomet on a personal level.

“DJ of the universe” is used as a reference to Baphomet in the book’s third section, and might be one of the best lines I’ve come across in any modern invocation. Certainly, the book will remix the art, aesthetic and ritual surrounding a complex figure.

If you’re looking for an updated perspective on Baphomet, this is the ideal book for your reading list. Recommended!