When you open the 1993 edition, you are not invoking ancient gods. You are invoking the power of 1990s suburban teenage rebellion, mass-market horror, and the very human desire to believe that forbidden knowledge is just a few dollars and a book report away. And for millions of readers, that was more than enough.
—End of article—
The book presents itself as a authentic Sumerian/Babylonian grimoire, allegedly translated by a mysterious figure known only as “Simon.” It discards Lovecraft’s fictional Cthulhu mythos names (like Cthulhu or Yog-Sothoth) and instead replaces them with historical Mesopotamian deities: (a deliberate phonetic twist on Lovecraft’s “Cthulhu”). Necronomicon -1993-
But what exactly was unleashed in 1993? It was not the first edition (that came in 1977), but rather the mass-market paperback reprint by . This wasn’t a dusty relic from the library of Abdul Alhazred; it was a slick, black-covered, $6.99 paperback sold in the “New Age” section of every Waldenbooks and B. Dalton in America. The 1993 Text: A Grimoire for the Masses Before 1993, obtaining a copy of the Simon Necronomicon meant hunting down a rare, expensive edition from Schlangekraft or Delirium Books. The Avon 1993 printing changed everything. It democratized the forbidden. When you open the 1993 edition, you are
La session a expiré
Veuillez vous reconnecter. La page de connexion s’ouvrira dans une nouvelle fenêtre. Après connexion, vous pourrez la fermer et revenir à cette page.