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After the Dessert: Difference between revisions

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'''After the Dessert''' was [[Martin Gardner]]'s third book on magic. It first appeared in mimeograph form with crude illustrations that he drew himself.


Reviewed in [[Genii 1941 July]]
[[Max Holden]] later reprinted it with new art by [[Nelson Hahne]].


[[After the Dessert]] was [[Martin Gardner]]'s third book on magic. It first appeared in mimeograph form with crude illustrations that he drew himself.  
The Shakespearean quotation in the front of the book: "After the dessert... 'Tis a goodly time for pleasantry", was made up by Gardner.<ref>My Chicago Booklets by Martin Gardner, [[Magicol]] 165 (November 2007)</ref>
 
[[Max Holden]] later reprinted it with new art by [[Nelson Hahne]].


The Shakespearean quotation in the front of the book: "After the dessert... 'Tis a goodly time for pleasantry", was made up by Gardner.
Reviewed in [[Genii 1941 July]].


== References ==
== References ==
* My Chicago Booklets by Martin Gardner, [[Magicol]] 165 (November 2007)
<references />


{{Books}}
{{Books}}

Revision as of 17:52, 28 August 2011

After the Dessert
AfterTheDessert.jpg
AuthorMartin Gardner
Publication Date1941
LanguageEnglish
 

After the Dessert was Martin Gardner's third book on magic. It first appeared in mimeograph form with crude illustrations that he drew himself.

Max Holden later reprinted it with new art by Nelson Hahne.

The Shakespearean quotation in the front of the book: "After the dessert... 'Tis a goodly time for pleasantry", was made up by Gardner.[1]

Reviewed in Genii 1941 July.

References

  1. My Chicago Booklets by Martin Gardner, Magicol 165 (November 2007)
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