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Tarl Warwick

    Tarl Warwick is a writer whose works delve into the occult and history. His approach to writing is informed by academic studies in archaeology and religion, bringing a sense of depth and detail to his texts. Warwick offers a unique perspective on occult traditions, enriched by his own experiences and engagement with online communities.

    Ars Goetia
    Morbid Stories
    • Morbid Stories

      • 338 pages
      • 12 hours of reading

      "Morbid Stories" is calculated to be the most grueling ride through terror and evil ever concocted by the hands of mankind. Utterly depraved, mindless, filled with degeneracy and a hopelessness and resignation to torment that only true lunatics can fully appreciate. This second edition has been re-edited once more, to remove all remaining traces of errors and provide the reader with an even more satisfying look into madness and the halls of perdition itself. From the Satanic to the simply violent, from the perverted and deranged to to macabre, "Morbid Stories" offers not one story but a whole compendium of short writings, each designed to evoke a different feeling, with all feelings evoked remaining starkly negative and designed to fill the reader with disgust. In this endeavor, something more insane than splatterpunk has been designed.

      Morbid Stories
    • The Ars Goetia is one of the most notorious works of ritual occultism ever created. Originally part of a loose literary history dating to the 17th century, it was compiled with other material by Samuel MacGregor Mathers in 1904, forming the infamous "Lesser Keys of Solomon" or Lemegeton. Containing a list of seventy two demons, their seals, and the method by which they can be summoned by the Master, this book (for it is its own book) contains a fair mix of the bizarre along with its demonology, with grotesque descriptions of otherworldly beings constrained by King Solomon himself; those selfsame fiendish devils which, by his power, built the Temple of Jerusalem itself.

      Ars Goetia