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On September 18, 2021, an anime television series adaptation was announced by Fujimi Fantasia Bunko. [18] The series was produced by ENGI and directed by Hiroshi Ikehata, with Shigeru Murakoshi overseeing series scripts, Yōsuke Itō designing the characters and serving as chief animation director, and Harumi Fuuki composing the music.
The following is a list of characters in the W.I.T.C.H. comic books. The series follows five teenage girls who possess magical powers over the five elements of nature. [1] [2] [3] The main cast are at least the second generation of Guardians of Kandrakar. [4] [5]
A. Hannah Abbott (Harry Potter)Agnes (The Vampire Diaries and The Originals)Aja (The Vampire Diaries)Homura Akemi/Homulilly (Puella Magi Madoka Magica)Alexis (The Vampire Diaries)
Anime and manga about witchcraft (2 C, 61 P) Pages in category "Television shows about witchcraft" The following 21 pages are in this category, out of 21 total.
The Alchemyst reached No. 2 on 26 August 2007 [2] and as of 24 March 2008 it had sold in excess of 150,000 copies. [3] The Magician reached No. 4 on 13 July 2008. [4] The Sorceress reached No. 5, [5] and The Necromancer reached No. 3. [6] The books have been nominated for various teen literary and reader's awards.
Salem (TV series) The Secret Circle (TV series) Shadow and Bone (TV series) Shaka Laka Boom Boom; Shararat (TV series) Shirley Temple's Storybook; Siegfried & Roy: Masters of the Impossible; Sleepy Hollow (TV series) The Smurfs (1981 TV series) The Smurfs (2021 TV series) The Smurfs (1961 TV series) Sprookjesboom; Sunaina (TV series) Super 4 ...
Nine Lackey stories written for the Sword and Sorceress series anthology involve Tarma and Kethry as the main characters. With the exception of "A Dragon in Distress", all of these short stories have subsequently been published in a compiled Tarma and Kethry novel called Oathblood (April 1998, ISBN 0-88677-773-9 ).
The Sword and Sorceress series is a series of fantasy anthologies originally edited by American writer Marion Zimmer Bradley, and originally published by DAW Books.As she explained in the foreword to the first volume, she created the anthology to redress the lack of strong female protagonists in the subgenre of sword and sorcery.