Books on Solar Returns - Predictive Astrology


Why are there no really good books on how to interpret and progress Lunar or Solar Returns?

also, i dont think there really are any good SOLAR return books either? checked both the UK and USA's Amazon.com website..and it is the same "cotton candy" books.....have even checked Astrology books.com..and same "Cotton candy" books.

why is this? why there isnt atleast 1 good book that tells how to progress a Lunar return chart...as i think this is basic stuff isnt it?

please explain what you can

thanks fo ryour answers!

how is Anthony Louis as an astrological writer? how his book on Solar returns is?

how his book on Solar returns is too? (if have read)


please describe what you can about him and his books.. (particularly the one on Solar returns..how compared to other ones? and why so difficult to find a good book on solar returns? which authors have even better ones and how?

thanks for your answers!


Anthony Louis, the pen name used by Dr. Anthony Louis Labruzza, is a psychiatrist who has practiced astrology as an avocation for over 30 years. He's written good beginner's books on horary and tarot. Using his real name, Labruzza, he translated volume 18 of French astrologer Jean Baptiste Morin's Astrologia Gallica, a 26 volume tome first published in Latin in 1661, 5 years after Morin's death.

His interest in Morin or Morinus as he preferred to be called, led him to study book 23 (translated by James Holden) on Revolutions, the old name for solar returns. From book 23 he became intrigued by another more contemporary astrologer (20th century) named Alexandre Volguine (1903 - 76). Volguine published a book on solar returns and incorporated a lot of Morin's ideas into his work. Louis' book on solar returns spends a lot of time on Volguine, but references Morin often as well.

Louis' book is accurate and informative. It should be read on its own merits, not as a commentary on Morin. Morin's volume 23 (published by AFA) is outstanding, but if the reader is not familiar with Morin and his methods, it will leave him scratching his head. Morin is not easy reading. It isn't that the subject matter is so difficult, but rather his style, considered scholarly in the 17th century, is tedious when read in contemporary English. The astrology, however is among the best ever written. Start with Louis.



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Government Backing for Solar Firms Remains an Economic Drag

The economic damage inherent in federal backing for solar power companies extends beyond Solyndra-style bankruptcies, in which taxpayers pour money into unprofitable but politically popular ventures. Even where government-backed companies stay afloat, federal intervention directs resources to less productive and profitable activities.

Some solar power companies based in California are succeeding where Solyndra failed (that is, staying in business), due primarily to the state’s renewable energy mandate and restrictions on cheap energy. But while the companies have received significant backing from the federal government, taxpayers are potentially on the hook for $28 million per permanent job created.

But the costs exceed even potential taxpayer losses. The federal government’s incentives for investment in the industry – which, the companies acknowledge, attracted investors who would otherwise have steered clear of solar – have diverted more than $7 billion in financing to the solar industry. That means less available financing for companies that do not enjoy solar’s government backing.

The Millions: Most Anticipated: The Great 2010 Book Preview

There’s something for every lover of fiction coming in 2010, but, oddly enough, the assertive composition may be posthumous reporting. Roberto Bolaño’s constant tread into the canon has inured us to the guess of the bestseller from beyond the dour (and of performance, for as want as there have been literary executors, this has been nothing new), but beyond the four(!) new books by Bolaño we also have have potentially substantial works by the likes of Ralph Ellison and Henry Roth , intriguing new books from Robert Walser and Ernst Weiss , a guaranteed bestseller from Stieg Larsson , and, looming in 2011, the closing, unfinished untested of David Take care of Wallace . Perhaps, in the thick of all this, it is a remedy to pay attention to that we have many energizing books on their way from those still with us, including Elizabeth Kostova , Joshua Ferris , David Mitchell , Jennifer Egan , Don DeLillo , Ian McEwan , Yann Martel , and many others.

Pointed thanks to by Ralph Ellison : Proper that this lyrics advance showing starts off with a posthumous best-seller. Ellison’s unfinished oeuvre will not be the the only posthumous vocation to get one's hands readers notice in 2010, but it will be perhaps the one with the most adventures fixed devoted to to it and peradventure, in the accounting of those who regulate the canon, the most noted. Ellison superbly struggled to wrap up a faulty different after the crucial broadside of by Roberto Bolaño : The paroxysm of posthumous Bolaño annual will go on in 2010 with as many as four (that I was proficient to find) books by the Chilean originator published. Bolaño has been unmistakably one of the biggest publishing stories of the last few years, and publisher New Directions has been capably and speedily adding title-deed after label...

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