Quick Answer
Saturn: A New Look at an Old Devil (1976) is Liz Greene's definitive psychological astrology guide to Saturn. A Jungian analyst and astrologer, Greene argues Saturn is not a malefic planet but an initiator - showing where your deepest psychological work lies. The book covers Saturn by sign, house, aspect, and synastry with remarkable depth.
Table of Contents
Key Takeaways
- Saturn as initiator, not punisher: Greene's central argument is that Saturn's difficulties are not arbitrary obstacles but structured developmental challenges - the places where honest self-confrontation produces genuine growth rather than mere suffering.
- Jungian framework: As a qualified Jungian analyst, Greene applies shadow theory, individuation, and psychological complex theory to Saturn with genuine depth - making this both an astrology book and a depth psychology text.
- Comprehensive coverage: Saturn by element, sign, house, aspect, and synastry are all covered, making this a complete reference for understanding Saturn's role in any birth chart.
- The Saturn return: Greene's treatment of the Saturn return (circa ages 28-30) as a critical developmental passage remains one of the most psychologically perceptive accounts of this life transition in astrological literature.
- A classic that holds up: Originally published in 1976, the book has never gone out of print and is still considered essential reading by serious astrologers nearly five decades later.
What Is This Book?
Saturn: A New Look at an Old Devil was first published in 1976 and has not been out of print since. It is Liz Greene's systematic study of Saturn in the birth chart - covering the planet's meaning in the four elements, all twelve houses, its major aspects to other planets, and its role in the comparison of two charts (synastry). It is widely considered the definitive psychological treatment of this astrological symbol.
The book emerged at a specific historical moment in astrology. The 1970s were years of genuine intellectual ferment in the field: astrologers were beginning to systematically engage with depth psychology, particularly Jungian analysis, and to develop what would become known as psychological or humanistic astrology. Greene was central to this development. Her Saturn book demonstrated what psychological astrology could look like when done rigorously - and set a standard that subsequent work has been measured against.
The title's proviso - "a new look" - announces the book's project. Traditional astrology had treated Saturn as a malefic planet, an inherently difficult symbol associated with delay, restriction, loss, and limitation. Greene's argument was not that these associations were wrong but that they were incomplete. Saturn is difficult, yes. But its difficulties are purposeful - they reveal where the individual needs to develop, where genuine character is built, and where the deepest available rewards come from honest confrontation with limitation.
Why This Book Remains Essential After 50 Years
Many astrology books date quickly. Cultural references change, psychological fashions shift, and what seemed fresh becomes dated. Saturn: A New Look at an Old Devil has aged unusually well because Greene's analysis is not tied to current trends but to enduring patterns in human psychology. The Saturn complexes she describes in 1976 are as recognizable in clients today as they were then. The developmental arc she maps - from Saturnine repression, through confrontation with limitation, to earned freedom - is as accurate a description of how human character actually develops as any psychological model available. This is why the book is still assigned at the Centre for Psychological Astrology and still cited by practicing astrologers as a foundational text.
The book is available on Amazon in the Weiser Books edition, with a newer Weiser Classics Series edition also in print. Both contain the complete original text.
Who Is Liz Greene?
Liz Greene was born in 1946 and holds both a doctorate in psychology and qualification as a Jungian analyst from the C.G. Jung Institute. She also holds a diploma in astrology from the Faculty of Astrological Studies in the UK, giving her genuine credentials in both fields rather than superficial familiarity with one used to dress up the other.
She cofounded the Centre for Psychological Astrology in London with Howard Sasportas in 1983. The Centre ran seminars and training programs that trained hundreds of astrologers in the psychological approach and produced a generation of practitioners who brought psychological depth to the field. After Sasportas's death in 1992, Greene continued the Centre's work and has been its primary guiding figure.
Her other major works include The Astrology of Fate (1984), Relating: An Astrological Guide to Living with Others (1978), The Inner Planets (with Howard Sasportas, 1993), and The Dark of the Soul (2003). She has written extensively on outer planet transits, mythological dimensions of astrological symbolism, and the relationship between astrology and depth psychology.
Greene's Intellectual Foundations
- C.G. Jung: Her primary psychological framework - shadow, individuation, archetypes, psychological complexes
- Classical mythology: Saturn as Cronus, the mythological context for the planet's symbolism
- Traditional astrology: She engages seriously with the historical tradition while transforming its interpretation
- Clinical psychology: Her practice as an analyst gives her access to how psychological patterns actually manifest in lived human experience
- Comparative religion and esotericism: Appears throughout her work as background context for the symbolic dimensions of the planets
Saturn as Psychological Symbol
Greene's first and most fundamental move is to establish what kind of symbol Saturn is. Against both the simple astrology-as-fortune-telling approach (Saturn means bad things will happen) and the naive positive-reframe approach (Saturn just means discipline and hard work), she develops a more complex and Jungian reading.
Saturn represents what she calls a psychic process - a specific pattern of psychological development that is both universal in its structure and individual in its expression. The universal structure involves encounter with limitation, frustration, and the sense of inadequacy; honest confrontation with what those experiences reveal about character; and the possible emergence of genuine integrity, competence, and freedom from the initial constrictions.
The individual expression is shown by Saturn's position in the birth chart: which sign, which house, what aspects. These determine where in the person's life this process is concentrated, what kind of limitations are encountered, and what kind of character development is potentially available through meeting them.
Saturn, Cronus, and the Myth of the Devouring Father
Greene is attentive to Saturn's mythological roots. In Greek mythology, Cronus (the Greek Saturn) was the god of time who ate his own children to prevent them from overthrowing him - until his son Zeus escaped and eventually castrated him, freeing his siblings. This myth captures several dimensions of the Saturn complex: the way that fearful, controlling forces can devour the vitality and potential of what they ostensibly protect; the way that what is most feared will eventually emerge regardless of attempts to prevent it; and the way that liberation from Saturnine constriction requires genuine confrontation rather than merely waiting for it to pass. The myth is not incidental decoration but an encoded psychological reality that Greene unpacks throughout the book.
One of Greene's most useful concepts is the distinction between genuine Saturnine integration and two forms of failure. The first failure is identification with Saturn's restrictions - becoming rigid, fearful, withholding, and joyless in an attempt to avoid the pain of limitation. The second failure is rebellion against Saturn's demands - projecting the limitations outward, blaming others for one's difficulties, and never developing the character that genuine engagement with limitation would produce. Genuine integration involves neither identification nor rejection but honest encounter that produces earned wisdom.
Saturn by Element
The core of the book is organized by element - the four classical elements of fire, earth, air, and water that determine the fundamental quality of each sign. This organizational choice reflects Greene's conviction that the element of the sign Saturn occupies matters more for understanding its core expression than the specific sign alone.
Saturn in Fire Signs (Aries, Leo, Sagittarius): The fire element is associated with vitality, self-expression, enthusiasm, and the sense of being a unique individual force in the world. Saturn in fire signs creates difficulty with exactly these qualities. The person may feel their natural vitality is somehow inadequate, forbidden, or dangerous. They may suppress their expressiveness, their ambitions, or their confidence in their own judgment. The developmental task is to stop apologizing for existing fully and to learn to trust the natural life force that Saturn in fire signs has made feel threatening.
Saturn in Earth Signs (Taurus, Virgo, Capricorn): The earth element is associated with material reality, practical competence, the body, and security. Saturn in earth signs creates anxiety around material provision, competence, and the ability to function effectively in the physical world. Paradoxically, some of the hardest-working and most practically competent people have Saturn in earth signs - they have driven themselves to master the very area where they felt most inadequate. The developmental task is to develop genuine security through earned competence rather than through fearful accumulation.
Saturn by Element: Key Themes
| Element | Core Challenge | Developmental Task | Signs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fire | Difficulty with self-expression, vitality, and identity; the life force feels risky or wrong | Learn to trust and express natural vitality; stop apologizing for existing fully | Aries, Leo, Sagittarius |
| Earth | Anxiety around material security, practical competence, and the body's reliability | Develop genuine security through earned competence; distinguish real from imagined material threats | Taurus, Virgo, Capricorn |
| Air | Difficulty with thinking, communication, and intellectual confidence; ideas feel dangerous or inadequate | Develop authentic intellectual authority; learn to communicate and relate without excessive self-censorship | Gemini, Libra, Aquarius |
| Water | Difficulty with feeling, vulnerability, and emotional depth; the inner world feels threatening | Develop genuine emotional intelligence; learn to feel without being overwhelmed or dissociated | Cancer, Scorpio, Pisces |
Saturn in Air Signs (Gemini, Libra, Aquarius): The air element is associated with thought, communication, relationship, and the exchange of ideas. Saturn in air signs creates difficulty in these areas - the person may feel intellectually inadequate, may over-censor their communications, or may struggle with the reciprocity that genuine relationship requires. Many writers and thinkers have Saturn in air: the difficulty motivates intense effort to develop genuine competence in the area that felt most threatening.
Saturn in Water Signs (Cancer, Scorpio, Pisces): The water element is associated with feeling, vulnerability, the unconscious, and emotional depth. Saturn in water signs creates particular challenges because the emotional world becomes a place of danger rather than resource. The person may be emotionally constricted, may have developed strong defenses against feeling, or may swing between numbness and overwhelm. The developmental task involves developing genuine emotional intelligence - the capacity to feel deeply without losing oneself.
Saturn by House
If the sign shows the quality of Saturn's expression, the house shows the area of life where this expression is concentrated. Greene covers all twelve houses, and the discussion of each is genuinely substantial - not a paragraph of keywords but an extended exploration of what Saturn's presence in each domain of life actually means psychologically.
Saturn in the first house creates a person who struggles to feel entitled to simply exist and be seen. Self-presentation may be either rigidly controlled or deeply uncertain. The task is to develop genuine self-respect that does not depend on external validation.
Saturn in the fourth house - the house associated with roots, family, home, and the deep foundations of personality - often indicates a childhood in which security was somehow conditional or incomplete. The early home life may have been marked by emotional unavailability, instability, or excessive demands. The task is to build genuine inner security that does not depend on recreating the original family dynamic, whether by trying to fix it or by compulsively avoiding it.
Saturn in the seventh house - the house of close relationships - creates a person for whom committed relationship is both deeply desired and deeply threatening. There may be a pattern of attracting partners who embody Saturn's qualities (older, more established, restrictive, demanding) or of avoiding commitment through hyperindependence. The task is to develop the capacity for genuine adult partnership that honors both autonomy and commitment.
Saturn in the Tenth House: The Archetypal Saturn Placement
Saturn is considered the natural ruler of the tenth house (career, public role, achievement, and social authority). When Saturn occupies its own house, its qualities become central to the person's entire professional and public life. Greene describes this as one of the most demanding placements - the sense that one must prove oneself in public, that success requires extraordinary effort, that failure is both always possible and utterly catastrophic. Many of the most accomplished public figures in history have had Saturn in the tenth: their ambition is driven partly by the fear that they will be found inadequate. The developmental task is to develop genuine authority - not performance of competence, but the actual earned confidence that comes from sustained dedicated work over time.
Saturn in Major Aspects
Greene covers Saturn's aspects to the personal planets (Sun, Moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars) and to the outer planets (Jupiter, Uranus, Neptune, Pluto) in considerable depth. Each aspect combination creates a specific dynamic in which Saturn's qualities interact with the function represented by the other planet.
Saturn conjunct or square the Sun is perhaps the most classically Saturnine placement: the person's sense of identity and vitality (Sun) is entangled with restriction, difficulty, and the need to prove themselves. This often produces either compensatory overachievement (working harder than anyone else to overcome the sense of inadequacy) or resignation (giving up before the task of self-development can become too demanding).
Saturn in aspect to the Moon creates difficulty in the emotional realm: the feelings may be suppressed, the need for nurturing may feel shameful, or the person may have internalized a critical inner voice that comments on every emotional response. Greene connects this to the Jungian concept of the negative mother complex - the internalized experience of conditional or withdrawn nurturing that becomes a harsh inner voice.
Saturn conjunct Venus creates what Greene describes as the loveless placement - not because the person does not desire love but because the very desire for love has become associated with disappointment, lack, or the sense of being unworthy. This often produces either deep loneliness (withdrawing from love to avoid the pain of its absence) or relationships with a distinctly Saturnine quality (older partners, relationships defined by duty, love that must be earned repeatedly).
Saturn in Synastry
One of the most practically important sections of the book for people studying their relationships is Greene's treatment of Saturn in synastry. When one person's Saturn makes significant aspects to another person's personal planets, the dynamic created is complex and often difficult to understand from within the relationship itself.
The Saturn person, in Greene's analysis, tends to function as a limiting, testing, or structuring force in the life of the other person - whether intentionally or not. They may represent parental authority, demand, or restriction. They may feel to the other person like someone who holds them back, judges them, or imposes standards they struggle to meet. Yet the same Saturn connection that creates friction often creates the deepest sense of commitment and seriousness.
Greene argues that Saturn connections in synastry are often what hold long-term relationships together through difficulty, and that relationships with no Saturn contact often lack the gravity and seriousness that make sustained commitment possible. Easy connections are pleasant but may not generate enough developmental tension to keep growing people together over time.
The Saturn Return
Every 29-30 years, Saturn completes one full cycle of the zodiac and returns to the position it occupied at birth. The first Saturn return (roughly ages 28-30) is one of the most widely recognized astrological phenomena, both within the astrological community and increasingly in popular culture. Greene's treatment of it in this book is among the most psychologically perceptive available.
She argues that the Saturn return is not primarily an external event - a time when things go wrong or structures collapse - but an inner developmental imperative that becomes impossible to ignore. Everything that has been built on false foundations - inauthentic career choices, relationships entered for the wrong reasons, self-images that do not correspond to genuine character - becomes unstable and often falls apart. This is not punishment but the inescapable demand of genuine development: the person must now become who they actually are rather than who they thought they should be.
The Three Saturn Returns
- First Saturn return (ages 28-30): The passage from extended adolescence to genuine adult life. Careers, relationships, and self-understanding built on external expectation rather than inner truth face a reckoning. The question is: what am I actually here to do?
- Second Saturn return (ages 57-60): A second major developmental passage, typically involving confrontation with mortality, the question of legacy, and the relationship between what was actually achieved and what was originally hoped for. Often an intense period of stock-taking and reorientation.
- Third Saturn return (ages 86-89): If the person lives long enough, a final developmental passage in which the life is reviewed from the perspective of genuine completion. Greene discusses this primarily in the context of the second return.
The Jungian Framework
Greene's application of Jungian psychology to Saturn is not superficial. She uses several of Jung's most important concepts with genuine care.
The shadow concept is central. Jung used "shadow" to describe the aspects of personality that the conscious ego cannot accept and therefore rejects - pushing them into the unconscious where they continue to influence behavior without the individual's awareness. Greene argues that Saturn's house and sign placement indicates where the shadow is most heavily loaded: the area of life where the person's rejected self-aspects are concentrated and where they are most likely to create problems through unconscious projection.
The individuation process - Jung's term for the lifelong journey toward psychological wholeness - maps onto the Saturn developmental arc. Saturn's difficulties are not random obstacles but specific challenges in the individuation process. They arise where character development is most needed, and they are resolved not by becoming free of them but by genuinely engaging with them until what they require has been developed.
Saturn and the Daemon
Greene uses the concept of the daemon - the inner guiding spirit or personal genius in Greek philosophical tradition - to illuminate what Saturn ultimately serves. The daemon is not a comfortable presence: it makes demands, creates dissatisfaction with the merely adequate, and refuses to allow the person to settle into comfortable mediocrity. Saturn, in Greene's deepest reading, is the astrological symbol of this daemon - the inner voice that says the work is not yet done, that something genuine is still to be achieved, that the person has not yet fully become themselves. The pain of Saturn is the pain of being held to one's own highest standard. The freedom Saturn eventually offers is the freedom of having genuinely met that standard.
What Is Psychological Astrology?
Greene's Saturn book is the foundational text of what became known as psychological astrology - an approach to birth chart interpretation that uses the tools of depth psychology rather than predictive techniques as its primary interpretive framework.
Predictive astrology asks: what will happen? When will it happen? Psychological astrology asks: what is the character of this person's psychological reality? What complexes and developmental tasks are indicated? What kind of life experiences are likely to be generated by this particular psychological structure?
The shift in question changes everything about how the chart is interpreted. Saturn is no longer a malefic that brings bad events. It is a symbol of a psychological function and developmental process that will manifest in various ways depending on the individual's level of consciousness and the choices they make in response to the demands it presents.
Greene was explicit that psychological astrology is not a replacement for therapy, medical treatment, or practical decision-making support. But she argued that the birth chart, interpreted psychologically, offered a uniquely detailed and accurate map of an individual's psychological landscape - a map that could accelerate self-understanding considerably when used skillfully.
How to Use This Book
Saturn: A New Look at an Old Devil requires some basic astrological literacy to use effectively. Readers who do not know what house their Saturn occupies, what sign it is in, or what aspects it makes to other planets in their chart will need to calculate or obtain their birth chart before the book's specific interpretive sections become applicable to them.
Free birth chart calculation is available from sites like Astro.com, which requires birth date, time, and location. Once you have your chart, locate Saturn and note its sign, house, and major aspects (conjunctions, squares, oppositions, trines, and sextiles to personal planets).
Read the element section that covers your Saturn's element first - this gives the broadest and most fundamental picture. Then read the house section for your Saturn's house. Then read any aspect sections relevant to your chart. The synastry section becomes relevant when exploring specific relationships.
Pairing this book with Howard Sasportas's The Twelve Houses provides essential context for understanding the house system that Greene's analysis assumes. For the Jungian foundations, John Sanford's Evil: The Shadow Side of Reality or Murray Stein's Jung's Map of the Soul provide accessible introductions to the psychological concepts Greene applies.
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What is Saturn: A New Look at an Old Devil?
Liz Greene's 1976 landmark book on Saturn in astrology. As a Jungian analyst and astrologer, Greene argues Saturn represents a psychic process of initiation through difficulty, not a malefic planet of punishment. The book covers Saturn by sign, element, house, aspect, and synastry with psychological depth.
Who is Liz Greene?
A Jungian analyst with a doctorate in psychology, qualified at the C.G. Jung Institute, and professional astrologer. Cofounder (with Howard Sasportas) of the Centre for Psychological Astrology in London. Her other major works include The Astrology of Fate and Relating.
What does Saturn represent psychologically?
In Greene's framework: the area of life where the individual's deepest psychological work is concentrated; the complex formed around inadequacy and fear in that area; and - when honestly engaged - the process by which genuine character, integrity, and earned freedom emerge from confronting those difficulties.
What is the Saturn return?
Saturn's return to its birth position, occurring approximately every 29-30 years. The first Saturn return (ages 28-30) is a major developmental passage: everything built on inauthentic foundations faces destabilization, and the individual is pressed to become who they actually are rather than who they thought they should be.
Is this book for beginners?
It requires basic astrological literacy - knowing your Saturn's sign, house, and major aspects. For someone with that foundation, it is an excellent second or third astrology book. Complete beginners will benefit from a basic chart interpretation guide first.
What Jungian concepts does Greene apply?
Shadow (rejected aspects of personality projected outward), individuation (the lifelong journey toward psychological wholeness), and psychological complex (a constellation of feelings around a specific issue that operates semi-autonomously). Saturn's placement shows where these dynamics are concentrated.
Where can I get Saturn: A New Look at an Old Devil?
Available on Amazon in the Weiser Books and Weiser Classics Series editions. Has been continuously in print since 1976 and is available at most metaphysical booksellers and libraries.
What is Saturn: A New Look at an Old Devil by Liz Greene?
Saturn: A New Look at an Old Devil is Liz Greene's landmark 1976 book on the astrological symbol of Saturn. Greene, a Jungian analyst and professional astrologer, argues that Saturn represents not just obstruction and difficulty but a psychic process of initiation through which the individual can develop greater self-knowledge, honesty, and eventually genuine freedom. The book covers Saturn in each of the four elements, in all twelve houses, in major aspects, and in synastry.
Who is Liz Greene?
Liz Greene is one of the most influential astrologers of the 20th and 21st centuries. She holds a doctorate in psychology and is a qualified Jungian analyst. She is cofounder (with Howard Sasportas) of the Centre for Psychological Astrology in London, which has trained hundreds of astrologers in the psychological approach. Her other major works include The Astrology of Fate, Relating, and The Inner Planets. She brought Jungian psychology's concepts of shadow, projection, and individuation into systematic dialogue with astrological interpretation.
What does Saturn represent in astrology according to Liz Greene?
Greene argues that Saturn represents several interrelated things: the principle of limitation and form-giving; the experience of difficulty, frustration, and delay; the psychological complex formed around the area of life where the individual feels most inadequate or fearful; and - crucially - the initiatory process through which these difficulties, honestly faced, can become a pathway to genuine self-knowledge and integrity. Saturn is the planet that shows you where your character is tested and where growth is most demanding but also most real.
How does Saturn by sign affect a person?
Greene organizes Saturn's influence by the four elements. Saturn in fire signs (Aries, Leo, Sagittarius) tends to create difficulties around self-expression, identity, and the vital life force - a person who struggles to assert themselves or trust their own vitality. Saturn in earth signs (Taurus, Virgo, Capricorn) creates challenges around the material world, security, and practical competence. Saturn in air signs (Gemini, Libra, Aquarius) creates difficulties in thinking, communication, and relationship. Saturn in water signs (Cancer, Scorpio, Pisces) creates challenges around feeling, vulnerability, and emotional depth.
What is Saturn return in astrology?
The Saturn return occurs approximately every 29-30 years when Saturn completes one full cycle of the zodiac and returns to the exact position it occupied at birth. The first Saturn return (around ages 28-30) is widely considered one of the most significant developmental passages in adult life - a period when the structures built in youth are tested and often have to be rebuilt on more authentic foundations. Greene discusses the Saturn return extensively as a critical developmental moment in the life cycle.
What is psychological astrology?
Psychological astrology, as developed by Greene, Sasportas, and others at the Centre for Psychological Astrology, applies the insights of depth psychology (particularly Jungian analysis) to astrological interpretation. Rather than using astrology to predict events, psychological astrology uses the birth chart to illuminate psychological patterns, complexes, and developmental potentials. Planets become symbols of psychological functions and processes rather than external forces acting on the individual. Saturn, in this framework, is not a curse but a map of where the individual's deepest psychological work lies.
What does Saturn in the 12 houses mean?
Each house represents a different domain of life experience. Saturn in the first house typically creates difficulty with self-assertion and identity. Saturn in the second house creates anxiety around material security. Saturn in the seventh house creates challenges in close relationships. Saturn in the tenth house creates a demanding relationship with career and public achievement. Greene covers all twelve houses in detail, always emphasizing that Saturn's placement shows where the individual's most demanding developmental work occurs - and where, if that work is genuinely undertaken, the deepest rewards are possible.
How does Saturn operate in synastry (relationship astrology)?
In synastry (the comparison of two birth charts to understand relationship dynamics), Saturn aspects between two people's charts have complex significance. Saturn touching another person's personal planets often creates a feeling of being limited, judged, or held responsible by them - but also a sense of seriousness and commitment. Greene argues that Saturn connections in synastry are often what hold long-term relationships together, even when they feel difficult, because they engage the individuals' deepest developmental issues. Easy relationships rarely promote growth; Saturn contacts in synastry often indicate karmic or developmental significance.
Why is Saturn called 'the old devil'?
The phrase comes from traditional astrology and mythology where Saturn (the Greek Cronus) was a problematic deity - the god who ate his own children, associated with time's devouring quality, with coldness, restriction, and death. Traditional astrology considered Saturn a 'malefic' planet bringing difficulty and limitation. Greene's book challenges this entirely negative view - hence 'a new look' - arguing that Saturn's difficulties are not punishments but initiatory tests that, when met with honesty and courage, produce genuine development rather than mere suffering.
What Jungian concepts does Liz Greene apply to Saturn?
Greene draws particularly on Jung's concepts of the shadow (the aspects of personality that have been rejected or underdeveloped, which then create problems until integrated), the individuation process (the lifelong journey toward wholeness that requires honest engagement with all parts of oneself), and the psychological complex (a constellation of related feelings and experiences around a specific issue that can feel compulsive). Saturn's placement in the chart indicates where the individual's shadow material is concentrated and where the individuation process will make its most demanding demands.
Is Saturn: A New Look at an Old Devil suitable for beginners?
The book requires some basic astrological literacy - familiarity with the signs, houses, and major aspects. Someone completely new to astrology will benefit from reading an introduction to chart interpretation first. However, Greene's writing is clear and accessible despite the depth of its content. Many astrologers consider it one of the best second books for someone who has learned the basics and wants to understand astrological interpretation at a deeper psychological level.
Where can I get Saturn: A New Look at an Old Devil?
The book is available on Amazon in both the original Weiser Books edition and the Weiser Classics Series edition. It has remained continuously in print since its first publication in 1976. The standard paperback ISBN is 1578635071. It is also available at most metaphysical bookstores and from the Astrology Library in digital format.
Sources and References
- Greene, Liz. Saturn: A New Look at an Old Devil. Weiser Books, 1976.
- Greene, Liz. The Astrology of Fate. Weiser Books, 1984.
- Sasportas, Howard. The Twelve Houses. Aquarian Press, 1985.
- Jung, C.G. Aion: Researches into the Phenomenology of the Self. Princeton University Press, 1959.
- Stein, Murray. Jung's Map of the Soul: An Introduction. Open Court, 1998.
- Campion, Nicholas. The History of Western Astrology. Continuum, 2008.
- Tyl, Noel. The Principles and Practice of Astrology. Llewellyn, 1973.