virus: birth of a meme explained

From: Michelle Anderson (michelle@barrymenasherealtors.com)
Date: Thu Jun 05 2003 - 12:22:17 MDT

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    appears at first reading to be an account of the writing of the "real"
    Necronomicon

    "The Doom that Came to Chelsea "

    <snip>

    Herman had vigorously encouraged and supported the creation of the
    Schlangekraft Necronomicon, edited by "Simon." No doubt he'd grown weary
    of explaining to customers that H.P. Lovecraft's fabled forbidden tome
    was a fiction, a plot device for great horror stories and nothing more.
    He was savvy enough to sell leftover chicken bones as human finger bones
    to wannabe necromancers, so he surely knew that the market for a
    "genuine" Necronomicon could be huge-with the right packaging. In 1977,
    the book made its debut in the window of Herman's little shop of horrors
    in Chelsea. It generated a scene of its own, a scene bursting with mad,
    unfocused creativity and slapstick mayhem.

    Robert Anton Wilson and Robert Shea had just published their Illuminatus
    trilogy, and interest in secret societies and occult lore was sweeping
    through counterculture circuits. Grady McMurtry was attempting to
    jumpstart the long-dormant OTO in California and had just succeeded in
    having Aleister Crowley's Thoth tarot deck published. Punks and
    proto-goth/industrial types searched out obscure Satanic treatises and
    rare tracts from the seemingly defunct Process Church of the Final
    Judgement. Unrepentant hippies and uber-feminists found common ground in
    the gentle, woodsy eco-cult of the wicca, available in enough variant
    "traditions" to suit any palate with an appetite for sweets.

    <snip>

    Into this bubbling swamp of spiritual fecundity stepped Peter Levenda,
    aka "Simon." Charming, soft-spoken and aloof, well-versed in all aspects
    of occult theory and practice, he eased his way to the center of the
    scene. The Necronomicon was a team effort. Herman provided the
    sponsorship, while the design and layout were the work of Jim Wasserman
    of the OTO, a raving cokehead from Jersey named Larry Barnes whose daddy
    had the production facilities and a fellow who called himself Khem Set
    Rising (who also designed the sigils). The text itself was Levenda's
    creation, a synthesis of Sumerian and later Babylonian myths and texts
    peppered with names of entities from H.P. Lovecraft's notorious and
    enormously popular Cthulhu stories. Levenda seems to have drawn heavily
    on the works of Samuel Noah Kramer for the Sumerian, and almost
    certainly spent a great deal of time at the University of Pennsylvania
    library researching the thing. Structurally, the text was modeled on the
    wiccan Book of Shadows and the Goetia, a grimoire of doubtful
    authenticity itself dating from the late Middle Ages.

    <snip>

    http://www.nypress.com/16/23/news&columns/feature.cfm

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