Interview with VALEFOR: The Sixth Duke of the Goetia is a thousand-question dialogue on temptation, theft, desire, corrupted trust, moral self-deception, and the difficult path of restitution.
In the traditional Ars Goetia, VALEFOR is described as the sixth spirit, a duke who appears as a lion with the head of a man, governs ten legions, and is known as a familiar who may tempt men toward theft. This book approaches that dangerous reputation not as a shallow curiosity, but as a serious spiritual problem: how desire becomes temptation, how small concessions become grave corruption, how trust is manipulated, and how the soul justifies what it already knows to be wrong.
Through ten extensive topics, Eisenheim questions VALEFOR on the formation of temptation, the gradual corruption of conscience, the false safety of familiar spirits, the psychology of appropriation, greed, complicity, inner justification, property, immediate advantage, and the possibility of repairing what has been broken.
This is not a book that glorifies theft or corruption. It is a work about discernment, responsibility, restitution, and the painful restoration of truth after moral failure. VALEFOR is treated here as a mirror held before the hidden movements of the will: the secret bargain, the attractive shortcut, the stolen thing, the lie told inwardly before the act is committed outwardly.
Written in a formal interview style, this volume belongs to Eisenheim's continuing series of occult dialogues with the spirits of the Goetia. It is intended for readers of ceremonial magic, demonology, esoteric Christianity, spiritual ethics, and practical occult philosophy who seek not entertainment, but depth, discipline, and confrontation with the hidden mechanics of the soul.