Lying in a dark undisturbed drawer for decades lay Harry Houdini's copy
of THE DISCOVERIE OF WITCHCRAFT, a book written by Reginald Scot in
1584. It is the first book in the English language to describe sleight
of hand tricks, and Houdini's copy was very special because it held the
key to a mystery which fascinated magicians for centuries. Just who did
Reginald Scot obtain all his information from - who was the magician who
gave away some of the greatest and most closely guarded secrets of
conjuring? The answer lay in the barely legible notes Houdini had
scribbled in the margins. 'Shakespeare's copy, see in rear cover,' read
Houdini's less than cryptic message. Inside the back of the book were
William Shakespeare's handwritten notes of about fifty tricks and
sleights, some of which appeared in THE DISCOVERIE OF WITCHCRAFT.
The
secret is now fully revealed for the very first time: the young Will
Shakespeare, while having just fathered a child, needed money, so he
took the job.
In a story as exciting as any detective novel,
author Richard Kaufman deciphered Shakespeare's ridiculous
scribbling...and has written this book, which includes forty-five
effects by Shakespeare (some lousy ones, too - he wasn't always clever),
and another twenty contributions from some of the world's greatest
cardmen, including: Derek Dingle, Edward Marlo, Jon Racherbaumer, Harry
Lorayne, Gene Maze, Darwin Ortiz, Ken Krenzel, Bill Simon, Phil
Goldstein, and Russell Barnhart....
Even while Shakespeare is spinning in his grave, over seven-hundred animated illustrations that seem to move combined with
Richard Kaufman's superb text will clearly teach you many fine card routines you will be proud to add to your repertoire.
Approximatley: 184 pages with 727 black and white illustrations