I stumbled upon 'Wormwood Star: The Magickal Life of Marjorie Cameron' while digging into obscure occult art and counterculture figures, and wow, what a ride. This documentary peels back the layers of Cameron's life—artist, muse, and witch—who orbited around figures like Jack Parsons and Aleister Crowley. It's not just a biography; it dives into her surreal art, her role in the 'Babalon Working' ritual, and how she became this almost mythic figure in underground circles. The film balances her personal struggles with her creative explosions, painting her as both fragile and fiercely independent.
What really stuck with me was how it captures her refusal to be pinned down—by society, by the men in her life, or even by the occult itself. She wasn’t just a footnote in someone else’s story; she was the story. The doc uses archival footage and interviews to create this dreamlike vibe, like you’re flipping through her grimoire. By the end, I felt equal parts inspired and haunted—like I’d glimpsed something forbidden.
If you’re into esoteric art or 20th-century weirdness, 'Wormwood Star' is a must-watch. Marjorie Cameron’s life feels like something out of a surreal novel—she was this fiery, enigmatic artist who tangled with rocket scientists, occultists, and Beat poets. The documentary shows how her art wasn’t just paintings; it was a ritual, a way to channel her visions. Her connection to the Babalon Working (this wild occult experiment with Parsons) is spine-tingling—it’s like watching history and myth blur together. The film doesn’t shy away from her darker moments, either—her isolation, her battles with mental health—but it never reduces her to a victim. Instead, you see her raw power, how she turned chaos into creation. I walked away obsessed with her ink drawings and that unshakeable sense she was dancing with forces most people wouldn’t dare approach.
Marjorie Cameron’s story in 'Wormwood Star' is the kind of thing that makes you question reality. Here’s this woman who was literally painted by Kenneth Anger, worshipped as a goddess by occultists, and created art that feels like it’s whispering secrets. The documentary unfolds like a spell—part tragedy, part triumph. It digs into her marriage to Jack Parsons (yes, that rocket scientist occultist), her time in the Navy, and how she became a muse for the California counterculture. But what’s wild is how her art evolved: those stark, haunting figures she drew seem to stare right into your soul. The film’s strength is how it lets her contradictions breathe—she could be both vulnerable and terrifying, a recluse who burned bright in avant-garde circles. After watching, I spent hours down rabbit holes about Thelema and her influence on modern witchcraft. It’s a niche deep dive, but totally worth it.
'Wormwood Star' paints Marjorie Cameron as this unsung icon of occult art. The doc’s got this eerie, poetic tone—like her life was one long incantation. From her involvement in Parsons’ rituals to her later years as a reclusive artist, it’s a trip through her mind. Her drawings? Pure nightmare fuel, but in the best way. The film leaves you wondering: was she channeling something otherworldly, or just her own brilliant, tortured psyche?
2026-03-02 23:02:16
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The Lycan King’s Witch: Beneath the Crimson Moon
Natalia Chavez
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When Anastasia, a lower level green witch, finally flees from a vengeful wolf pack, she finds herself soul-bond to the very thing she hates, a Lycan. Not only is he a Lycan, but he’s none other than Dominiko, the Lycan King himself! She thought struggling to accept him was the worst of her worries until she is faced with a catch 22. She must overcome her prejudice, embrace her power, and choose between the witches and Lycans, all while a war threatens to tear both worlds apart. Could she really go against her own people? Or will the Lycan kings hope for peace work?
The universe is no longer what it used to be and the world has become a total mess.
The death of Gadelia, the ancestral wolfwitch assigned by the Heavenly Principalities to maintain the balance between the witches and wolfs has wrecked upon the two supernatural world, choas and war.
The soul of Gadelia was prevented from passing through the third gate of Heaven by the Second Triad after she was murdered out of greed and jealousy by Madera, her blood sister. Sometimes the ones we least expect something from are the ones that does the most shocking things.
For millenniums, the soul of Gadelia wondered the surface of earth, in search of a perfect and pure body to inhabit and all but one was found after decades of searching.
Young and naive, Amaris Croston discovered a world that was believed to exist only in fairytales when she bumped into Lucian Moon, King Mozerus only son and also the heir to the wolf throne who turned out to be her 'mate', a word she didn't understand until she dived into the world of the supernaturals.
A world so beautiful and enchanting yet full of mysteries and sometime, chaos and wars.
She houses a soul as old as time itself and is been subjected to mental tortures by an invisible force.
Fate is tricky but the moon goddess and other triads of heaven had it all planned out.
Their meeting was a collision, a fuel and spark of combustion.
The angels worked overtime to diffuse this bomb whilst two powerful mind found even ground, opening their mind to a destiny, only imagined in dreams long ago.
Follow Amaris and Lucian on their daring journey of self-discovery, Love, Betrayal, War and Maintaining Stability.
On the night she’s supposed to become Luna, Seraphine is murdered by her mate, not because he hates her, but because a prophecy forces him to.
She dies thinking he rejected her.
But the Moon Goddess gives her a rebirth into the body of a witch, the most feared species by wolves.
Now she returns to the pack hidden in a new body unknown to her former mate and she’s carrying a forbidden power she never had before.
She has one mission:
Expose why she was truly killed… and why her mate cried while stabbing her.
But every truth she uncovers leads to a darker twist.
Saraid is your average witch hidden in a small town in Alabama. A blind date set up by her best friend and faerie, Wendy sends Saraid's ife spiraling out of control as the evening ends with her magically bound to Liam Maddox, a man with a secret all his own.
Liam Maddox, born and raised in Ireland used to be one of the highest-ranking warriors of the Guardians of the Celtic Coven. An unforeseen attack left him cast out of the ranks for what the witches he protected called impure blood.
Hired in secret to locate the true heir to the throne of the Celtic coven, Liam moves to the states where he meets Saraid. The one whom he has been tasked to find.
A simple date flips their entire world on its axis as the two are magically bound together, leaving them sporting strange and unusual powers.
When the truth is revealed Saraid finds herself traveling to Ireland to protect the lives of her closest friends and the man she unwillingly fell in love with, but when she is faced with the choice of her magic or love, will she choose to surrender her powers for the people she loves or is she strong enough to have both?
Detective Casie Blackwood thought she'd left her supernatural past behind when she joined the police force ten years ago, fleeing the shame of public mate rejection and family abandonment. Now, ritualistic murders are forcing her back into a world she desperately wanted to forget.
Three human victims have been discovered with surgical precision wounds and ancient symbols carved into their palms—markings that point to forbidden blood magic from before the supernatural communities established peaceful coexistence. When Casie finds a note written in the old pack language reading "The Hunt Begins," she realizes someone is deliberately targeting humans to harvest their primal fear, threatening to expose the entire supernatural world.
Partnered with Detective Rick O'Connor, who remains unaware of her true nature, Casie must navigate the investigation while concealing her enhanced senses and knowledge of the supernatural. The wounds aren't from blades—they're fang marks. The positioning isn't random—it's ritualistic. And the killer's scent carries a terror that suggests they're being hunted by something even more dangerous.
Forced to break ten years of silence, Casie contacts her estranged brother Elias, learning the symbols are ancient binding marks used to channel supernatural energy across factional boundaries. The killer needs seven sacrifices total to complete a ritual that will shatter the barriers between the human and supernatural worlds. With three victims already claimed and only four days until the next lunar cycle, time is running out.
As federal agents circle and media attention intensifies, Casie must choose between maintaining her carefully constructed human life and embracing the supernatural heritage she rejected. The investigation isn't just about stopping a killer—it's about preventing an all-out war that could destroy both worlds she's sworn to protect.
Sarah has always known she's different from other people. With heightened senses of hearing, smell, and sight, she's able to perceive the world around her in a way that nobody else can. She doesn't know who her parents are, as she was left at an orphanage as a baby and grew up in foster care.
What she also doesn't know is that she's actually the Witch Supreme in the Otherworld, a fact that makes her the target of an evil witch named Sheila. When Sheila discovers that Sarah is living in the Firstworld, she sends her minions to capture her.
Fortunately, Sarah is able to evade her pursuers with the help of a Jason, a werewolf alpha from the Otherworld who also happens to be her mate, who rescues her from certain capture. She has to go to the Otherworld where it is more safe for her.
In the Otherworld, Sarah discovers that she has powerful magic at her disposal, including control over fire, water, and wind. She also has to defeat Sheila and stop her from taking over her powers.
She needs to strike a balance between love and duty.
With the fate of the Otherworld hanging in the balance, Sarah must call upon all of her magic and courage to face down her enemies and save herself and those she loves.
Marjorie Cameron's life was a whirlwind of mysticism, art, and counterculture, and 'Wormwood Star' captures that beautifully. I picked it up after stumbling onto her artwork in an old 'Beat Generation' exhibit, and wow—what a deep dive into her world. The book doesn’t just chronicle her ties to occult figures like Jack Parsons; it paints her as a fiercely independent artist who defied labels. Her story is messy, poetic, and utterly human, which makes it gripping even if you’re not into esoterica.
That said, it’s not a light read. The prose leans dense at times, almost mirroring Cameron’s own labyrinthine thoughts. But if you’re into biographies that feel like tripping through history—part surrealism, part raw memoir—this is gold. I ended up falling down rabbit holes about her influence on psychedelic culture, which the book nudges you toward without overexplaining. A gem for niche history buffs.
I stumbled upon 'Wormwood Star: The Magickal Life of Marjorie Cameron' while digging into obscure occult biographies, and it completely reshaped how I view art, mysticism, and rebellion. Marjorie Cameron wasn't just an artist—she was a force of nature, tangled up in the early days of California's occult scene alongside figures like Jack Parsons. The book dives deep into her surreal paintings, her unapologetic embrace of chaos magick, and how she carved her own path in a male-dominated world. What grips me is how raw her story feels—less polished than typical biographies, more like stepping into a dusty attic full of forgotten spells and half-burned manuscripts.
It's not a light read, though. The prose sometimes feels as labyrinthine as Cameron's own mind, weaving between her art, her tumultuous personal life, and the esoteric philosophies she championed. If you're into esoteric history or feminist takes on occultism, it's gold. But even if you're just curious about the weird edges of 20th-century counterculture, her life—full of séances, avant-garde films, and brushes with fame—makes for a mesmerizing rabbit hole. I still think about her ink drawings months later; they haunt like fragments of a dream.
Man, 'Wormwood Star: The Magickal Life of Marjorie Cameron' is such a deep dive into her enigmatic world! The book doesn’t just skim the surface—it peels back layers of her occult practices, from her involvement with Aleister Crowley’s Thelema to her own unique blend of ritual art and personal mysticism. It’s packed with details about how she channeled her visions into paintings and performances, blurring the line between art and magick. What’s really fascinating is how it captures her raw, unfiltered approach—she wasn’t about textbook spells but lived magick as an extension of her being.
That said, if you’re expecting a step-by-step grimoire, you might be disappointed. The book leans more into her life’s narrative, with her practices woven into her story rather than laid out as instructions. But that’s what makes it compelling! You get a sense of how her magick was inseparable from her identity—chaotic, intense, and deeply personal. It’s less about 'how to' and more about 'why,' which, honestly, feels truer to her legacy.