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Your Chinese Horoscope for Each and Every Year
Your Chinese Horoscope for Each and Every Year
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Your Chinese Horoscope for Each and Every Year

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Your Chinese Horoscope for Each and Every Year
Neil Somerville

Your Chinese Horoscope for Each and Every Year is a helpful and informative guide on Chinese horoscopes. Built on the long-standing success of Your Chinese Horoscope, this new book gives insights into each of the Chinese signs as well as special success tips to help readers make the most of their sign.The book also contains inspirational quotes for each sign as well as a section in each chapter concerning relationships and how signs relate to one another. However a key feature of the book will be the detailed horoscopes given for each sign and covering each of the Chinese years. The horoscopes will highlight trends for the year, giving indications of how readers can make the most of the year as well as areas which could prove problematic. Each horoscope ends with some special tips for the year.In the many years Neil Somerville has written Your Chinese Horoscope, he has built a reputation for the advice and helpfulness given in his books. Your Chinese Horoscope for Each and Every Year is a book designed for the long-term and one of lasting value.

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Copyright (#uec57384d-93bf-5646-9f9a-8a56fd5c050e)

Thorsons

An imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers

1 London Bridge Street

London SE1 9GF

www.harpercollins.co.uk (http://www.harpercollins.co.uk)

First published by Thorsons 2017

FIRST EDITION

© Neil Somerville 2017

Cover layout design © HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd 2017

Cover illustration © Shutterstock.com

A catalogue record of this book is available from the British Library

Neil Somerville asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

Find out about HarperCollins and the environment at

www.harpercollins.co.uk/green (http://www.harpercollins.co.uk/green)

Source ISBN: 9780008191054

Ebook Edition © June 2017 ISBN: 9780008191047

Version: 2017-04-04

About the Author (#uec57384d-93bf-5646-9f9a-8a56fd5c050e)

Neil Somerville is one of the most widely read writers in the West on Chinese horoscopes. His 30-year annual series, Your Chinese Horoscope, enjoyed an international following and was translated into many languages. He is also the author of the bestselling books Chinese Love Signs (Thorsons, 2000), Chinese Success Signs (Thorsons, 2001), The Answers (Element, 2004) and Cat Wisdom (Thorsons, 2017).

Neil has always felt that much can be learned from the wisdom of the East and, as a hobby, enjoys writing haiku. A keen walker and traveller, he lives with his wife in Berkshire, England, and has a son and a daughter and far too many books.

Dedication (#uec57384d-93bf-5646-9f9a-8a56fd5c050e)

TO ROS, RICHARD AND EMILY

Epigraph (#uec57384d-93bf-5646-9f9a-8a56fd5c050e)

As we march through life,

we each have our hopes, our ambitions and our dreams.

Sometimes fate and circumstance will assist us,

sometimes we will struggle and despair,

but march we must.

For it is those who keep going,

and who keep their aspirations alive,

who stand the greatest chance of securing what they want.

March determinedly,

and your determination will, in some way, be rewarded.

Neil Somerville

Contents

Cover (#u4ef9618d-fb9d-559f-8b38-8a026cb35213)

Title Page (#u0899f322-6e2f-5b0d-99d1-8d079f214fdf)

Copyright (#ud8a74e29-4545-5fd0-a944-f1775d288be0)

About the Author (#uc98fa8c4-a06e-5d78-b6e7-6ede6b2137e0)

Dedication (#u7223951a-6a8e-583a-90c9-f3f3c1868332)

Epigraph (#u2d21b3f1-779c-5308-9e81-92ed81e06344)

Acknowledgements (#u72f7562a-683a-5a78-82f5-637a5c0f09c6)

Introduction (#ue006638c-8e5e-5d6e-8055-18c4a47e4b03)

The Chinese Years (#ue318be01-7338-571f-b9bd-e7b436efebc9)

The Rat (#u5ec5dbac-fc93-54ea-a319-b26cff3b4911)

The Ox (#u990bae1e-a7a1-55c4-83ea-5952f09f410d)

The Tiger (#ub4293494-0189-509d-9ce5-d31d5f289de0)

The Rabbit (#litres_trial_promo)

The Dragon (#litres_trial_promo)

The Snake (#litres_trial_promo)

The Horse (#litres_trial_promo)

The Goat (#litres_trial_promo)

The Monkey (#litres_trial_promo)

The Rooster (#litres_trial_promo)

The Dog (#litres_trial_promo)

The Pig (#litres_trial_promo)

Appendix (#litres_trial_promo)

Elements (#litres_trial_promo)

Ascendants (#litres_trial_promo)

A Final Word (#litres_trial_promo)

About the Publisher (#litres_trial_promo)

Acknowledgements (#uec57384d-93bf-5646-9f9a-8a56fd5c050e)

The world of a writer is both wonderful and strange, and I would like to give a special thanks to my family, Ros, Richard and Emily, for their great support and for putting up with the mountain of paperwork I produce and trail of notes I leave in my wake. And thank you too to my parents, Peggy and Don, for all they did.

Thanks too to Carolyn Thorne, my editor at HarperCollins, for her encouragement and support, as well as to Lizzie Henry for all her work over the years. A special mention as well to Barbara Booker for her thoughtfulness and faith, and to Barbara Smith, who has kindly given me an opinion on many an occasion.

I am also grateful to the many who have helped me in my study of Chinese horoscopes, including those who first awakened my interest in the wisdom of the East. And I acknowledge too the work of other writers on Chinese horoscopes, all of whom have added to the subject and shared their insights. Particularly to Derek Walters, Theodora Lau and Suzanne White, all of whose work I recommend, and other luminaries, thank you.

And to you who are now reading these words, thank you for taking the time and for your interest. And wherever you may be reading and at whatever time, I hope that in some way this book will help and encourage you as well as alert you to the specialness and potential that are within you.

Introduction (#uec57384d-93bf-5646-9f9a-8a56fd5c050e)

Whether in indicating portents or highlighting strengths and weaknesses, Chinese horoscopes offer a timeless wisdom from which we can all profit. Although their origins date back to at least 2637 BC, when Emperor Huang Ti introduced the Chinese calendar, it is only recently that the subject has gained prominence in the West. As a result, many are now familiar with their animal sign and look forward to reading what each Chinese year has in store. It is a fascinating subject and a helpful one.

For those new to Chinese horoscopes, the Chinese year is based on the lunar year, which starts in late January or early February. Each of the Chinese years is named after an animal and there is a legend offering an explanation for this. It describes how one Chinese new year, the Buddha invited all the animals in the kingdom to a party. Only 12 showed up – the Rat, Ox, Tiger, Rabbit, Dragon, Snake, Horse, Goat, Monkey, Rooster, Dog and Pig. In gratitude, the Buddha named a year after each of the animals and said that those born in that year would have some of the personality of that animal.

Another legend offers an explanation for the order of the years. According to this, the animals had to race across a river and the order they finished in would be the order of the years. The Rat, very much an opportunist and determined to win, craftily rode on the back of the Ox and, just as the Ox reached the riverbank, leaped off and ran ahead, so winning the race. This is said to be why the Rat starts the cycle of years and the Ox is next, followed by the other 10 animals. The Pig, who is known as a great finisher, aptly came in last.

To discover which animal year you were born in, you will need to look up your year of birth in the table of years that follows. If born in 1988, for example, you were born in the Year of the Dragon – and born under the sign of luck. However, if your birthday falls in January or February, do carefully check the dates to see in which year your birthdate actually falls.

Once you have identified your sign, you can look up the traits of the animal in the relevant chapter. Although there are many variations, which can be studied in more detail by considering elements and ascendants (described in the appendix), it is remarkable how Chinese horoscopes can indicate our true natures. Whether these show the loyalty and sense of duty seen in so many born under the sign of the Dog or the versatility, quick wits and memory skills of those born in the Monkey year, Chinese horoscopes can be illuminating. In addition to the main traits described in each chapter, there are also special tips to help each sign be at their best, together with inspirational quotes from people born under that sign.

The subject of relationships is also a fascinating one and each chapter contains a guide to how each sign relates to the other signs. Some signs are considered to be compatible and others complete opposites, but there are again many exceptions. While, for example, a Chinese proverb decrees, ‘The Ox and the Horse cannot share the same stable’, I am sure there are some born under these two signs who love each other very much and live happily together.

The main part of this book is, however, devoted to horoscopes, which are based on the trends and influences of each Chinese year. These give an indication of the most propitious years and the most problematic. Forewarned is forearmed, and Chinese horoscopes can help us to make the best of what is to come. This is one of the key values of them (and, I believe, of the I Ching too). They speak to us as if to a friend, but it is we ourselves who are masters of our destiny and we who must determine how best to direct our lives.

There is a Chinese proverb which reminds us, ‘Every moment is precious’ and what we do with our lives is precious too.

As you journey through the years, I wish you every good fortune.

The Chinese Years (#uec57384d-93bf-5646-9f9a-8a56fd5c050e)

Horse 11 February 1918 to 31 January 1919

Goat 1 February 1919 to 19 February 1920

Monkey 20 February 1920 to 7 February 1921

Rooster 8 February 1921 to 27 January 1922

Dog 28 January 1922 to 15 February 1923

Pig 16 February 1923 to 4 February 1924

Rat 5 February 1924 to 23 January 1925

Ox 24 January 1925 to 12 February 1926

Tiger 13 February 1926 to 1 February 1927

Rabbit 2 February 1927 to 22 January 1928

Dragon 23 January 1928 to 9 February 1929

Snake 10 February 1929 to 29 January 1930

Horse 30 January 1930 to 16 February 1931

Goat 17 February 1931 to 5 February 1932

Monkey 6 February 1932 to 25 January 1933

Rooster 26 January 1933 to 13 February 1934

Dog 14 February 1934 to 3 February 1935

Pig 4 February 1935 to 23 January 1936