Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Banis's first published work was a short story, "Broken Record," that appeared in the Swiss gay publication Der Kreis in 1963. [8] His first long work of fiction was The Affairs of Gloria, a heterosexual romance with a few lesbian scenes inspired by the recent popularity of novels with lesbian themes; it was published in 1964 by Brandon House, a Los Angeles paperback publisher.
The Man from C.A.M.P. is a series of ten gay pulp fiction novels published under the pseudonym of Don Holliday. The original nine were written by Victor J. Banis between 1966 and 1968; a tenth by an uncertain author appeared in 1971. [1]
2-Baby's fat, juice of cowbane, aconite, cinquefoil, deadly nightshade and soot. In the movie serial Warlock , the villain kills an unbaptised boy to get this "Flying Ointment". In Jodi Picoult 's Salem Falls , a group of four girls practicing witchcraft ingest a flying ointment made of belladonna.
Word of Faith is a movement within charismatic Christianity which teaches that Christians can get power and financial prosperity through prayer, and that those who believe in Jesus' death and resurrection have the right to physical health.
Atropa bella-donna flower. Atropa bella-donna is a branching herbaceous perennial rhizomatous hemicryptophyte, often growing as a subshrub from a fleshy rootstock. Plants can reach a height of 2 m (7 ft) (more commonly 1.5 m (5 ft)), and have ovate leaves up to 18 cm (7 in) long.
Deadly Nightshade may refer to: Deadly nightshade (Atropa belladonna), a poisonous perennial herbaceous plant in the nightshade family; Deadly Nightshade (comics), a ...
J.X. Williams is a pseudonym used by several different authors during the 1960s for many adult novels. [1] It was used accidentally on the cover of Ed Wood 's novel Parisian Passions (Ed Wood's name was on the title page), and it had been used by author Victor J. Banis , among others.
Atropine, racemic hyoscyamine, from the deadly nightshade (Atropa belladonna) Hyoscyamine, the levo-isomer of atropine, from henbane (Hyoscyamus niger), mandrake (Mandragora officinarum) and the sorcerers' tree (Latua pubiflora). Scopolamine, from henbane and Datura species (Jimson weed)