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The mysterious art of magic has been a source of wonderment since before the time of Christ. Shape shifting between the supernatural practices of 'real' magic and demonstrations of dazzling illusion, magic has been used to conjure the evil eye, burn villages to the ground, slice women in half, and save men from being crushed to death by five tonnes of cement. Robert Ralley's history takes us deep into this magical underworld to reveal the astounding stories of some of the world's greatest magicians. From the astrology of the three wise men to Harry Houdini's escapology, and David Blain's endurance tests, Ralley illustrates the changing perceptions of magic and the dangerous balance between illusion, fraud, and devilry that still exists today.

188 pages, Kindle Edition

First published June 1, 2010

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for A.M..
Author 7 books57 followers
January 13, 2022
Starting with the pre biblical references to Magi - as in the Wise men - and where the word Magic comes from. And right up to modern magicians like Penn & Teller, and David Blayne.

This is like reading a thesis, but it is super interesting to me.

3 stars
Profile Image for robyn.
955 reviews14 followers
March 1, 2018
Highly recommend as a resource. And as a general read; it's not as dry as a purely informative book would be, though it does start to haze if you keep reading it straight through.

In terms of scholarship, I wouldn't be qualified to catch mistakes, but the sheer quantity of information and the businesslike way it's put together, as well as the easy flow from one topic to the next, is amazing.

Ralley starts with the magic of antiquity (Greek and Roman) and follows it all the way through to modern day. It's only 164 pages, so obviously it's not an in-depth analysis, but as a starter guide it's ideal. There are a few insets of curses or photos, which seem to have been chosen with care (you could lard a book on magic with picture after picture of occult or magic-show artifacts) and a 'further reading' section.

The tone throughout is completely non-judgmental. Like Joe Friday, Ralley is interested in just the facts, ma'am.

Profile Image for Any Length.
2,183 reviews7 followers
October 4, 2012
Everything you always wanted to know about Magic and everything you didn't know belonged in the topic of Magic has been covered in this book. Very informative.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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