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Magicians' Tricks, How They Are Done: Difference between revisions
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'''Magicians' Tricks, How They Are Done'' by [[Henry Hatton]] with [[Adrian Plate]], who well known magicians of their time is a book for amateur and professional magicians explaining 140 tricks performed with cards, coins, balls, eggs, handkerchiefs, and other common household items with 194 black-and-white illustrations. It features tricks from [[Germain]], [[Conradi]], [[Goldston]] and [[Okito]]. | '''Magicians' Tricks, How They Are Done''' by [[Henry Hatton]] with [[Adrian Plate]], who well known magicians of their time is a book for amateur and professional magicians explaining 140 tricks performed with cards, coins, balls, eggs, handkerchiefs, and other common household items with 194 black-and-white illustrations. It features tricks from [[Germain]], [[Conradi]], [[Goldston]] and [[Okito]]. | ||
The authors drew the wrath of many fellow magicians for exposure by permitting sections to be reprinted in a magazine for boys, "St. Nicholas". | The authors drew the wrath of many fellow magicians for exposure by permitting sections to be reprinted in a magazine for boys, "St. Nicholas". |
Revision as of 13:01, 6 September 2011
Magicians' Tricks, How They Are Done | |
Author | Henry Hatton |
---|---|
Publisher | The Century Co. |
Publication Date | 1910 |
Language | English |
Magicians' Tricks, How They Are Done by Henry Hatton with Adrian Plate, who well known magicians of their time is a book for amateur and professional magicians explaining 140 tricks performed with cards, coins, balls, eggs, handkerchiefs, and other common household items with 194 black-and-white illustrations. It features tricks from Germain, Conradi, Goldston and Okito.
The authors drew the wrath of many fellow magicians for exposure by permitting sections to be reprinted in a magazine for boys, "St. Nicholas".
This book became a classic and was called the 'first American general textbook' of magic by Henry Hay and rated one of the ten basic books by the historian H. Adrian Smith.
Contents
- I With Cards
- II With Coins
- III With Balls and Eggs
- IV With Handkerchiefs
- V Some After-Dinner Tricks
- VI Miscellaneous Tricks
Editions
- First Edition, the Century Co., New York, 1910
- The Century Co., New York, 1917
- Dover, 2003
- ISBN 0486425169
References
- MAGICIANS TELL THE SECRET OF FAMOUS TRICKS; Henry Hatton and Adrian Plate Give Some of Their Methods and Experiences in the Art of Mystifying the Public. New York Times, October 23, 1910
- http://magicref.tripod.com/books/hattonmagicianstricks.htm