“The Simon Necronomicon is a delicate topic for me, and so it has been a long time coming for me to actually give attention to answering others towards its details. In the past, I have directly avoided such a feat, preferring the work to stand on its own to those culled into its mystique, hardly able to be overshadowed by the efforts of other writers and occultists that have made a system to their own preferences, lending a healthy hand to supporting the allusions made in the fiction writing of H.P. Lovecraft and the later inspired Cthulhu Mythos – connected to our own efforts purely for the fact that the title Necronomicon is shared and perhaps even derived from the Lovecraftian sources.” (Liber 555)
“Since 2008 (officially), a team known as the Mardukite Chamberlains in conjunction with the Council of Nabu-Tutu (operated from Mardukite Ministries and responsible for the publications of the Mardukite Truth Seeker Press) have worked diligently in the fashioning of a complete library archives produced internally for our own purposes. This unique ‘genre’ has been entirely catalogued through to now, spanning everything from prehistoric and cosmogenetic origins through the evolution and development of human populations and traditions coupled with their understandings of technologies of the universe during each stage, as well as the practical knowledge employed. Certainly, this has been no small task and regardless of how monumental it actually is, these efforts have remained mostly unnoticed to the surface populations, ever remaining in the underground ‘scene’.” (from Joshua Free’s preface to “Stargate to the Abyss”, also available as “The Necronomicon for Beginners”.)
“Someone approaching the Simon Necronomicon without any previous occult knowledge may be confused as to its ‘magickal’ and ‘esoteric’ suggestions for ritual and ceremony, and yet the ‘heart’ of the material will still seep in and formulate some kind of change in the reader – especially if the lack of previous ‘occult’ knowledge is being coupled with no background in ancient ‘Middle Eastern’ or otherwise ‘Mesopotamian’ cultures and mythologies. If such is the case, the book will be naturally regarded as a highly cryptic or otherwise ‘incoherent’ blend of names and correspondences that are without basis.”
“My own personal interests in the Simon Necronomicon have always – for nearly twenty years now personally – remained fixed on its connection to the ancient “Mardukite” Anunnaki-oriented system. Similarly, the book has actually served as a ‘portal’ or ‘gateway’ in and of itself to many of its readers into this ‘lost’ and ‘forbidding’ pursuit of intellectual academia and occult esoterica; people who would otherwise have had no real familiarity with ‘Babylonian Gates’ and the ‘Anunnaki Gods’ later reminisce that the Simon Necronomicon was their own introduction to topics…” (from the preface to Liber 555, “Stargate to the Abyss”, also available as “The Necronomicon for Beginners”.)
Shrouded in doom and gloom, contrasted against the “Cthulhu Mythos” envisioned by H.P. Lovecraft, who very well may have developed the title — Necronomicon — for his own saga and literary cycle, the book presented by editor Simon is anything but a fabrication of fantasy, but is instead an allusion to a very real, though fragmented, “Mardukite” Babylonian Anunnaki Tradition, a system that once dominated the prehistoric and ancient world before the rise of the Greeks, Romans and even Egyptians!
The modern “Mardukite” research organization has spent nearly half a decade exploring the mysteries of Mesopotamia, the Anunnaki and related subjects. After having completed the entire ‘Necronomicon Anunnaki’ literary legacy with the Mardukite Chamberlains, prolific writer, editor and founder of the “Mardukites”, Joshua Free, ends his years of silence concerning the Simon Necronomicon by finally providing his expert commentary on the classic text in Liber 555, “Stargate to the Abyss: The Mardukite Guide to the Simon Necronomicon”.
Edition note: This “Liber 555″ material is simultaneously being released as “The Necronomicon for Beginners” by Joshua Free.


