Debbi Kempton-Smith is a globe-trotting astrologer whose clientele spans the seven continents (well, maybe not Antarctica) and the seven seas. That’s probably because she was herself raised just about everywhere anything was happening, being the child of a U.N. economist who was ever at the heart of the world’s latest hotspot. As she puts it, she “grew up in New York, Tel Aviv, Rome, Florence, Madrid, Barcelona, Paris, Geneva, London, New York, Nuremberg, New York, London, Oxford, Los Angeles and London.” And, finally, New York again, as that’s where she currently calls home base.
She is probably best known as the author of the hilariously irreverent, best-selling classic Secrets From a Stargazer's Notebook (Bantam Books 1982 eight printings; revised edition Topquark Press, 1999), and the Astrology Editor for the UK society magazine Tatler.
She has been practicing astrology for over 35 years and brings an international perspective to her practice, and her professional influences include Roy Alexander, Ronald Davison, Carolyn Dodson, Charles and Vivia Jayne, Jim Lewis, Jeff Mayo, Al H. Morrison, Bob Pike, Zane Stein, David Williams, and the astronomer George Lovi.
Numbered among her clients are psychiatrists, psychoanalysts, corporations, financial analysts, celebrities, politicians, and more. She says she has come to view the future — and the horoscope — as a long, lush salad bar. She'll tell you what the planets are serving up today, next year and ten years from now, so that you can chart your own course based on informed, smart, educated choices. And, the Void-of-Course Moon is a particular specialty and a fascination, picked up from Al H. Morrison long ago.
As you will see from a visit to the “Herobics” division of her site, she’s more than just a brilliant counselor and starcaster — she’s always knee-deep in major world humanitarian efforts which take her to the four corners of the earth. You can’t be brought up in the shadow of the likes of Dag Hammarskjold, U Thant, and Kurt Waldheim and not have the call of civilization constantly pushing your buttons. |