Having lived in Copenhagen all of his life, he moved into an abandoned school in Vinstrup north of Randers with his wife, where he presently spends his time expanding his authorship.
Wulffianism is anarchic in the word's real sense, entailing an acceptance of violence as a means and denial of modern civilization, resulting in public controversy.
The series continued in 1977 with the episodic Adam Hart og sjælemaskinen (English: Adam Hart and the Soulmachine), and Victor Janis og søn (Victor Janis and Son), both representing a more conventional novel structure, ending with an experimental novel, Oiufael (1977), primarily written in verse.
With Den 33. marts (1977, English: The 33rd of March), the plot is altered from outer to "inner space", a platform resembling that of American science fiction author Philip K. Dick.
Erwin Neutzsky-Wulff describes by novel form esoteric initiation and demonic possession in Indsigtens sted (1980, English: The Place of Insight).
Okkultisme raises its groundwork from epistemology, modern physics and neurology, as well as interpretations of visionary lyrics, such as those produced by William Blake.
Magi was followed by Oprindelse (1988, Origin), the first and only volume of an abortive world history, covering a time line from the Big Bang until ca.
On 20 August 1989, Erwin Neutzsky-Wulff preached at Hellig Kors Kirke, a church in central Copenhagen, declaring that Christianity had come to an end.
In the epic Verden (1994, The World), Neutzsky-Wulff includes time travels and similar phenomena, as he tries to delete Christ from history.
The plot is set in separated rooms: A girl selling herself as a sex slave, a man in a bunker after a nuclear war, an expedition to an alien planet, a haunted house investigator and finally, a poet not knowing he is an inspirational source for a mass murderer.
Reality constrains itself to self-created rooms and the apparently incoherent action is deliberately supposed to influence the reader to assume a magical way of thinking.
It is information-dense, cut to the bone and indirectly demands that the reader study a number of texts only referred to in the book to properly understand it.
The book describes the mystic initiation, a radical practice requiring women to be sexually enslaved (as in Rum), whereas men have to undergo a kind of virtual castration.
Themes as diverse as kabbalah, the mystic traditions of the Holy Grail, Gnosticism, fairy tales, Mozart's The Magic Flute and Wagner are treated in depth.