Book Endorsements

“Seidman’s “The Oracle of Kabbalah” is a feast of honey, humor, cultural diversity, and an outrageous insistence on hope. Though well rooted in indigenous Jewish understandings, a thousand flowers of the world’s teachers, make this personal divination style one that promotes the Divine in Nature and community without losing the nobility of the individual.”
- Martin Prechtel, author of Secrets of the Talking Jaguar and Long Life, Honey in the Heart.


“In these wide-ranging, mystical, sometimes fanciful meditations on the letters of the Hebrew alphabet, Richard Seidman … offers the reader a contemporary installment of both Judaism’s millennial love affair with the letters of the Hebrew alphabet and a clever invitation to enter the conversation.”
- Rabbi Lawrence Kushner, author of The Book of Letters.


“You don’t have to be Jewish to love The Oracle of Kabbalah. Richard Seidman has made the ancient wisdom and power of the Hebrew letters accesible to us all, so we can use it to help us better deal with the challenges of modern life.”
- Monte Farber and Amy Zerner, authors of The Enchanted Tarot


“Jewish sages teach that each letter of the Hebrew alphabet is an awesome universe. Richard Seidman gently guides readers to explore the use of these letters to open mysterious gates of wisdom hidden within each one of us. The Oracle of Kabbalah is an excellent tool for discovering the teachings of our own souls and is highly recommended.”
- Rabbi David A. Cooper, author of God is a Verb.


“These cards, grounded in ancient mystical knowledge, offer many doorways to the great mysterious, and the power of our own personal truth. To experience them is to realize the infinite depth and exquisite beauty of creation.”
- David Carson, co-author of The Medicine Cards.


“Richard Seidman offers us a direct, clear, and practical approach to the Divine Mystery. His understanding of the Hebrew Alef-Beit and his guidance in interpreting each letter ignites an inner lamp that can illumine the most shadowed corners of the soul.”
- Rabbi Rami M. Shapiro, author of The Way of Solomon.