It's…okay. It could have been better.
This book is the first of a proposed trilogy of tarot books that will start out mainly intended for beginners and end up mostly directed towards advanced practitioners. So understandably, most of the material in this book is beginner-level. Almost the entire first half is a basic guide to the cards, with four pages for each card in the Major Arcana and three pages each for the Minor Arcana and Court Cards. The guide offers keywords, upright and reversed meanings, and explanations of the symbols on the cards. After that, the book goes into choosing your first deck, the basics of spreads and how to do readings. Other articles cover interpreting Court Cards, reversals, gender and age issues in the cards, and how to handle the "spooky" cards. A long, detailed history of the tarot comes towards the end, and then an assortment of articles by well-known tarot authors (this book was funded by a Kickstarter campaign that exceeded its original goal; the bonus articles were some of the stretch goals).
The book covers an impressive amount of information. But I have trouble seeing it as a beginner's first book. It's comparatively expensive (hardcover, embossed cover, glossy paper, ribbon bookmark, color pictures on almost every page), large, and heavy (3.8 lbs./1.7 kg—yeah, I weighed it!), and there are a lot of books to learn tarot from that are less of a commitment. Intermediate and advanced tarot readers would probably be more likely to make that commitment, but then they probably already know most of what's in this book. Still, true to Lo Scarabeo's promises, I did find information in here that was new to me. The Court Diagram was an intriguing way to look at the Court Cards (although I agree with Jaymi's review that it's confusing to have the full explanation of the Court Diagram almost 100 pages after its introduction in the Court Card definition pages). The history of the tarot is one of the most detailed I've seen, and goes into far more depth than is usual for a beginning tarot book. Barbara Moore's article, "Tarot Truth," covers issues that beginning readers would do well to think about (do you believe that tarot can predict the future? where do you think the answers come from?).
The book is in desperate need of better editing. Sometimes it's in the organization of the material, like how information on the Court Diagram is scattered through the first half of the book. A discussion of reversed meanings comes well after the basic guide that gave reversed meanings for all the cards. And the copy editing needs help as well. The history section slews back and forth between past and present tense for no apparent reason. Nouns are capitalized randomly, usually nouns that aren't capitalized in English. There are few actual misspellings, but generally, a book with this much effort behind it deserves good editing. And yes, there are times when the book feels more like an advertisement for Lo Scarabeo's catalog of tarot decks than an unbiased guide to the tarot. Beginners may find this useful, but they can find other books better suited to their needs and bank balances; intermediate and advanced tarot readers may enjoy this, but it's not a must-have for anyone's collection.