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The Necronomicon was a tome of eldritch lore.
The Doctor Know who came to reside in the 925th Universe once claimed that he had co-written the Necronomicon. (PROSE: Good Crieff - The Tribulations of the Scottish Division) He also edited a much less foreboding book called Necronomics for Dummies. (PROSE: Open Sourcing, Good Crieff - The Tribulations of the Scottish Division)
Also in the 925th Universe, one of Marietta Over-There and Jenny Over-There's fond memories of childhood was “looking at all those goofy pictures in the John Dee translation of the Necronomicon”. Jenny actually had a better recollection of the book's contents than Marietta, even though it was Marietta who went on to be an occultist; Jenny once chastised Marietta for not having known Nyarlathotep was deceiving her about being an Elder God on the basis of the book. (PROSE: A Very Jenny Over-There Christmas (2024 reedit))
Behind the scenes
The Necronomicon is a recurring, public-domain element of the Lovecraftian mythos, introduced in Lovecraft's own 1924 short story The Hound; it is a dangerous tome containing information on various eldritch abominations and the means of summoning them. Variations of the book were soon quoted, or appeared physically, in the narratives of many other stories, having gradually become a pop-culture staple.
My Bloody Valentine, one of the earliest Jenny Everywhere stories, introduced the Plasmanomicon, a clear take-off on the Necronomicon. Although not officially open-source, the book has been referenced in many subsequent stories.
The same naming format was used for the Ficlinomicon. (PROSE: Our Strange and Wonderful House: The Library)
External links
H. P. Lovecraft/Cthulhu Mythos-related concepts in Jenny Everywhere media | ||||||||||
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