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Black Easter and The Day After Judgment were written with the assumption that the ritual magic for commanding demons, as described in grimoires, actually works.. In the first book, a wealthy arms manufacturer comes to a black magician, Theron Ware, with a strange request: he wishes to release all the demons from Hell on Earth for one night to see what might happen.
The Day After is an American television film that first aired on November 20, 1983, on the ABC television network. The film postulates a fictional war between NATO and the Warsaw Pact over Germany that rapidly escalates into a full-scale nuclear exchange between the United States and the Soviet Union.
The appearance came a day after a New York judge ruled that the former president owes his former home state more than $350 million in disgorgement from a years-long business fraud civil case ...
Black Easter and The Day After Judgment deal with what sorcery would be like if it existed, and the if the ritual magic for summoning demons as described in grimoires actually worked. Its background was based closely on the writings of practising magicians working in the Christian tradition from the 13th to the 18th centuries. [3]
Lawrence illustrated the covers to editions of Black Easter and The Day After Judgment.She also sketched the cover of Fugue for a Darkening Island by Christopher Priest.She contributed two covers to the Kalki: Studies in James Branch Cabell fanzine, for which she served as Art Director from 1967 to 1971. [5]
She received Academy Award nominations for her roles in A Star Is Born (1954) and Judgment at Nuremberg (1961), and hosted The Judy Garland Show (1963–1964), which garnered two Emmy nominations.
Festivus (/ ˈ f ɛ s t ɪ v ə s /) is a secular holiday celebrated on December 23 as an alternative to the perceived pressures and commercialism of the Christmas season.Originally created by author Daniel O'Keefe, Festivus entered popular culture after it was made the focus of the 1997 Seinfeld episode "The Strike", [1] [2] which O'Keefe's son, Dan O'Keefe, co-wrote.
Ron Weighell (1950–2020) was a British writer of fiction in the supernatural, fantasy and horror genre, whose work was published in the U.K., the U.S.A., Canada, Germany, Ireland, Romania, Finland, Belgium and Mexico.