The 27 CELESTIAL PORTALS
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.83 (518 Votes) |
Asin | : | 0940985845 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 471 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2016-10-29 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
Instead of taking away from the widely recognized meanings and significations of the 12 signs, they enrich them with a whole new depth of perspective and interpretation.. It is common knowledge that the 12 star-signs map the sky and set the stage for the drama of life. This book expands this awareness manifold by revealing that it is the 27 constellations, and not the 12 signs, which truly map the ecliptic and provide the celestial backdrop for affairs on earth
"Indispensable" according to Sox200Indispensable Sox2004 Highly valuable and important for any serious astrologer, or for anyone interested in Vedic mythology. Prash Trivedi is a very subtle and observant astrologer, and each Nakshatra becomes its "own universe" in this book, and is given thorough, searching attention and detailed treatment. I use this book for every reading and refer to it frequently.. . Highly valuable and important for any serious astrologer, or for anyone interested in Vedic mythology. Prash Trivedi is a very subtle and observant astrologer, and each Nakshatra becomes its "own universe" in this book, and is given thorough, searching attention and detailed treatment. I use this book for every reading and refer to it frequently.. Zoro said Informative, but not as practical as I expected!?1?!. I purchased this book based on the review by Linda Lee, and I am somewhat disappointed. Of course, I am new to Vedic astrology, and my familiarity with Sanskrit terms is rather limited; i.e., please consider this review as an amateurish one rather than a scholarly one.This brings up my first disappointment with almost all the books on Vedic astrology that I have looked at, and that is they lack a section or appendix that we (the beginners) may use as a reference for finding definitions of all these terms. These texts are peppered with these terms w. Demands time and attentionbut its worth it. This book takes a very different look at the nakshatras, one that is far more extensive but less balanced than interpretations found in the more popular books by Hart de Fuow and Dennis Harness.In many ways, this book is more accurate. Trivedi calls a spade a spade. If he feels a nakshatra almost always manifests negatively (Ashlesha and Purva Bhadrapada, for example) he unapologetically tells it that way, and doesn't really try to provide a more positive assessment. This makes the book less useful for those who must counsel people born under those