Magic Monday
Nov. 17th, 2024 11:05 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)

Also: I will not be putting through or answering any more questions about practicing magic around children. I've answered those in simple declarative sentences in the FAQ. If you read the FAQ and don't think your question has been answered, read it again. If that doesn't help, consider remedial reading classes; yes, it really is as simple and straightforward as the FAQ says. And further: I've decided that questions about getting goodies from spirits are also permanently off topic here. The point of occultism is to develop your own capacities, not to try to bully or wheedle other beings into doing things for you. I've discussed this in a post on my blog.
The image? I field a lot of questions about my books these days, so I've decided to do little capsule summaries of them here, one per week. As I mentioned last week, once I found a publisher willing to bring out my fiction, a lot of it found its way into print in a hurry, so we're going to be in tentacle territory for a while now. This was my fifty-third published book, and we're back in The Weird of Hali. This book had the longest and most roundabout genesis of all my tentacle novels. I'd originally planned for the sixth book in the sequence to be set in Greenland, and I wrote six drafts of that novel before realizing that there was too much story to fit into the limits I'd defined for the Weird. So I set the Greenland story aside -- it appeared later, much amended and with different characters, as A Voyage to Hyperborea -- and wrote this one, drawing heavily on the handful of stories Lovecraft set in New York City.
Justin Martense, the central figure in The Weird of Hali: Chorazin, became the viewpoint character in this story, and gave me the chance to explore a heroic fantasy with a very unheroic main character; I later did the same thing to an even greater extent with Toby Gilman, the main character of A Voyage to Hyperborea, who's even more of a dweeb than Justin but rises to the challenges before him in his inimitably awkward way. If you're wondering why I put dorky characters into these two books, why, it's the same reason I made an utterly unheroic sixty-year-old college professor coping with terminal cancer the main character of The Weird of Hali: Dreamlands; I'm bored to tears by the specially special protagonists -- and did I mention that they're special? -- who infest so much fiction these days, and wanted to explore the much more interesting (to me) situation of ordinary people caught up in extraordinary situations. If that turns your crank, why, you can get a copy here if you're in the US and here elsewhere.
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***This Magic Monday is now closed, and no more comments will be put through. See you next week!***
Hubris, Atis, Nemesis, and Tisis?
Date: 2024-11-18 05:05 pm (UTC)https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2Fbfd9f76e-4910-4c9c-8dc5-a6cf84ea27e0_1280x961.jpeg
If, psychologically and from an occult perspective a large proportion of people have become what they were supposed to be fighting against, what do you reckon the chances are a society can walk back from such stuff?
I saw you writing about the idea that the changer could be working things.
From the 'all is connected' idea, maybe the humans of the the West are so out of balance (after 500yrs of robber barons, piracy and devilish activities of our set of human beasts) that it is getting dissolved to free up the rest of the world to have a go? The decadence of a society that has culturally lost connection with the divine and raised a transhuman image of itself up instead...
Hubris, Atis, Nemesis, and Tisis?
https://www.greecehighdefinition.com/blog/hubris-atis-nemesis-tisis-ancient-greece
Re: Hubris, Atis, Nemesis, and Tisis?
Date: 2024-11-18 08:51 pm (UTC)That's a harrowing graph, but it reflects my experience as an observer. To my mind it's one symptom of the collapse of the consensus of corporate liberalism -- as Toynbee points out, a failed elite that loses the ability to inspire emulation generally settles for trying to force conformity. Collapse follows promptly.
That said, the old Greek analysis works just as well, and it's also certainly true that the West is losing its temporary hold on global power and the rest of the world is rising in response.
Re: Hubris, Atis, Nemesis, and Tisis?
Date: 2024-11-18 09:36 pm (UTC)Of course, it's just a poll and who knows the vagaries of that... still, that looks to be a significant number of people; and yes, harrowing.
Re: Hubris, Atis, Nemesis, and Tisis?
Date: 2024-11-19 03:38 am (UTC)