Developing your own dictionary to help you interpret your dreams is often highly personal because different symbols can have various meanings to different people. Looking into a few different dream interpretation resources can give you a good start to developing your own reference book.
1. “Dreamer’s Dictionary” by Stearn Robinson and Tom Corbett
This dream dictionary has sold over one million copies since it was written in 1986, and it continues to be a favorite resource today for interpreting dreams. This book is still sold in its original version and has not been edited because readers tend to think it is perfect just the way it is. This book helps dreamers decipher dream symbols and tell the difference between the four different types of dreams.
2. “The Dream Book” by Betty Bethards
Betty Bethards was a mystic who believed everyone had the capability to make their lives better by listening what their dreams told them. Her dream guide is one of the best-selling dream interpretation books around because it has logical interpretations of dream symbols that her readers can relate to. Published a year before the author’s death in 2002, this book has left all of her followers a way to reach their own destinies by reading their dreams.
3. “I Had the Strangest Dream...: The Dreamer's Dictionary for the 21st Century” by Kelly Sullivan Walden
This book is the dream interpretation for those looking for more modern dream symbols. If you dream about iPods, plastic surgery or other modern things that can’t be found in a traditional dream dictionary, this is the book for you. This dream dictionary has traditional symbol meanings in addition to items for the current technological age, giving readers a well-rounded look at their dreams.

