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The Annotated Erdnase: Difference between revisions
(New page: The Annotated Erdnase book was written by Darwin Ortiz and published by Magical Publications in 1991 It's Darwin Ortiz's excellent annotation of Expert at the Card Table....) |
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[[The Annotated Erdnase]] book was written by [[Darwin Ortiz]] and published by [[Magical Publications]] in 1991 | [[The Annotated Erdnase]] book was written by [[Darwin Ortiz]] and published by [[Magical Publications]] in 1991. | ||
It's | It's an annotation of [[Expert at the Card Table]] done by Darwin. There are notes, annotations, and photographs of various things all related in some way to gambling, cheating, or Erdnase. The book includes citations and references to other books and authors. It also has two appendices: "New Moves" and "The Search For Erdnase" by Martin Gardner. Several letters from [[Martin Gardner]] to M.D. Smith are reproduced as well. | ||
[[Richard Kaufman]] initiated the Annotated Erdnase project, but eventually sold the rights to Bill Taylor, who in turn sold it to Mike Caveney. In the initial concept, [[Michael Ammar]] suggested that hundreds of illustrations be added (which Dai Vernon did not like that idea), hence the original working title of "Illustrated Erdnase" as reported in Richard's Almanac volume 1. |
Revision as of 12:20, 14 April 2008
The Annotated Erdnase book was written by Darwin Ortiz and published by Magical Publications in 1991.
It's an annotation of Expert at the Card Table done by Darwin. There are notes, annotations, and photographs of various things all related in some way to gambling, cheating, or Erdnase. The book includes citations and references to other books and authors. It also has two appendices: "New Moves" and "The Search For Erdnase" by Martin Gardner. Several letters from Martin Gardner to M.D. Smith are reproduced as well.
Richard Kaufman initiated the Annotated Erdnase project, but eventually sold the rights to Bill Taylor, who in turn sold it to Mike Caveney. In the initial concept, Michael Ammar suggested that hundreds of illustrations be added (which Dai Vernon did not like that idea), hence the original working title of "Illustrated Erdnase" as reported in Richard's Almanac volume 1.