Dan Harms, Memorial Library, published his article, “‘To Give Myself to Be Carried Immediatly into Hell’: Weather, Witchcraft, and Two Late Seventeenth-Century Contracts between a Magician and a Student.” in the latest issue of Preternature: Critical and Historical Studies on the Preternatural. He also gave three presentations: “‘A fitter spot for a tale of darkness’: The Appropriation and Marketing of Early Modern Spirit Summoning, Folklore, and Local Landscape in Robert Cross Smith’s Tales of the Horrible,” at the International Congress for Medieval Studies, Kalamazoo, Michigan; “Winds, Witches, and Wicked Spirits: The Association of Witches with Other Dangers in a Late Seventeenth Century British Manuscript.” at the Witchcraft and Magic Conference, Centre for Renaissance and Early Modern Studies, University of York in the United Kingdom; and "'Thou Shalt Have Humanity’: Reciprocity, Reformation, and Conceptions of Spirit-Human Relations in a Ghost Summoning Incantation from Early Modern Britain.” during Ghosts in Britain and Ireland 1500-1950 History Conference at Mary Immaculate College, Limerick, Ireland.