Books
The Continental by Cameron Francis
“Sticky greatness = epic!! Great e-book and I will be using this one for definite!” — Chris Congreave
From January 2010 to February 2011, Cameron had 12 tricks published in the British IBM magazine “The Budget”.
The column was called “The Continental” and thanks to editor Stephen Tucker, Cameron is now able to offer you all 12 effects in one 28 page PDF.
The column includes tricks for close up and stand up work using cards, coins, bills, matchbooks, business cards, Sharpies, steno pads and drawings.
Mental Magnetism Course by Harry Lorayne
Mental Magnetism Course by Harry Lorayne
The Memory Arts – Expansion Pack 5
This new expansion pack is the most versatile yet.
Many of you have asked for a PDF of all 52 Locations so that you can print them out and truly customize their path. Well, we loved the idea and so set David and Sarah to task!
This Stack Builder Expansion Pack is an incredibly powerful tool especially if you pair it with the other expansion packs.
The options are truly endless, and most importantly, they are based on YOU. What do you want to get out of your memory path? Perhaps you want to physically build your favorite single stack on a
Nevermind by Mat L’Anoire
“When I first read ‘Scribble’ I had a huge smile on my face for the entire time I was reading it. I’ve just spent the past half an hour trying it out and an even bigger smile appeared! So cleverly constructed, it’s a creation of genius!” – Iain Moran
STRANGER
Mat’s ‘Invisible Deck with a regular deck’ opener. A cased deck of cards is placed on the table. A spectator names any card – a completely free choice. The deck is removed from the case and the
The Hermit Magazine Vol. 2 No. 9 (September 2023) by Scott Baird
- Box Bits by Joe Cole
- One Four All by Michael Kras
- Worker’s Cheek to Cheek by Kyle Leon
- Flurry by Michael Rubinstein
Mathematics, Magic & Mystery by Martin Gardner
Why do card tricks work? How can magicians do astonishing feats of mathematics mentally? Why do stage “mind-reading” tricks work? As a rule we simply accept these tricks as “magic,” we seldom recognize that they are really demonstrations of strict laws based on probability, sets, theory of numbers, topology and other branches of mathematics.
This is the first book-length study of this fascinating branch of recreational mathematics. Written by one of the foremost experts on mathematical magic, it summarizes, with considerable historical data and bibliography, all previous work in this field; it is also a creative examination of laws and their exemplification, with scores of new tricks, new insights and new demonstrations.