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The Amiable Art of Necromancy: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "{{MiscItemPage | image = Book Tome A Image.png | icon = Book Tome A Item Icon.png | description = '''The Amiable Art of Necromancy''' is a book written by Cherish Hollow. | quote = This book is redolent with the enticing smell of paper and ink. | book spoiler = | book text = [Excerpt from Cherish Hollow's ''The Amiable Art of Necromancy''] It's a lonely, lonely world for a young woman in the modern culture of necromancy. She chafes against the shibboleth. Who needs nec...")
 
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| where to find = * [[Circus of the Last Days]] {{coords|-86|-23}}
| where to find = * [[Circus of the Last Days]] {{coords|-86|-23}}
* On the roof terrace of [[Jannath]]'s estate. {{coords|-255|-66}}
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Revision as of 23:26, 21 February 2024

The Amiable Art of Necromancy image

The Amiable Art of Necromancy is a book written by Cherish Hollow.

Description Icon.png

This book is redolent with the enticing smell of paper and ink.

Properties

  • Books
  • Rarity: Common
  •  Weight: 0.5 kg / 1 lb
  • Price: 14 gp


Where to find

Text

[Excerpt from Cherish Hollow's The Amiable Art of Necromancy]


It's a lonely, lonely world for a young woman in the modern culture of necromancy. She chafes against the shibboleth. Who needs necromancy? What could such a gross thing possibly be for? These questions are very valid. I hope my answer satisfies. Necromancy is a social magic.


I have a zombie (Mister Nascent Owens) under my thrall. Now he remembers absolutely nothing of his past life. He only knows this new one I've given him. He derives a large amount of pleasure from, say, getting me tea, administering a stinky but relaxing backrub, or eating the brains of my enemies. The spiritual implications are pretty profound here, right? Here's a husk imbued with purpose, given a direction, made useful in the most economic sense, and happy in the metaphysical sense.


So who needs necromancy? We who demand a chance to challenge the whole 'death' thing, because we're weird, and lonely, and we like having friends as much as anyone...