UPDATE, September 24, 2003: Yes, we're late, but do we have stuff for you! First, there's a review of the Files in Fate Magazine, though that hasn't hit the newsstands yet. In the meantime, you can read two reviews from William E. Johns and Case Wright.
If you're wondering what we look like, we have pictures from the signing. Thanks to the folks at Needful Things for showing us such wonderful hospitality.
We just found out that Peter Levenda's Unholy Alliance: History of the Nazi Involvement With the Occult has been re-released in paperback from Continuum, with an introduction by Norman Mailer. (Whether Mailer is aware of Levenda's role in the Simon Necronomicon hoax, we cannot say.) At any rate, that introduction and the new preface contain some food for thought.
Before I forget, we updated the errata, too.
UPDATE, August 17, 2003: The book's out! Check for it at your local bookstore or favorite on-line retailer. We've also got a review of Lucifer Rising, a book on the history of Satanism.
UPDATE, August 2, 2003: Our one-stop book tour will occur on Labor Day weekend in Nashville. Check out the book signing page for more info.
UPDATE, July 15, 2003: A few more reviews, this time of Warlock and The Gate II. Soon to come - more info about the dreaded book signing, my review of Lucifer Rising, and more.
UPDATE, June 20, 2003: No updates to this site, but here's a piece on the Simon Necronomicon that more than makes up for it. The book's still slated for August - according to the computers in Borders, they may be putting it under the Horror section, so be sure to ask if you can't find it. Also, John and I are setting up a book signing at a shop somewhere in Nashville for the end of August! As we live so far apart, this will be a golden chance for anyone who wants a copy signed by both authors. More details to follow...
UPDATE, May 18, 2003: Good news - most of the artifacts missing from the National Museum in Baghdad seem to have been hidden in a basement wall. Of course, some remain missing, and I hope that those who would buy or sell them have enough conscience to return them. In the meantime, John's interests in occultism and medieval weaponry come together in his analysis of a mysterious artifact called The Sword of the Necronomicon, another chapter we had to cut from The Necronomicon Files.