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Al Baker's Mental Magic
Baker, Al

Al Baker's Mental Magic

Carl W. Jones Publisher of Magic (1949)
10

Genre

  • Conjuring

Subject

  • Magic-Mentalism

Plot

Baker, Al: Mental Magic
©1949 Carl W. Jones
Hardcover, 116 pages

Comments: Thirty effects: Mind Reading Technique, Baker Center Tear, Secret Billet Reading, Telephone Mysteries, Clairvoyance, Practical Telepathy, Pseudo-Fortunes. Illustrated by Miako & Kwakenat.

Contents:

ix Foreword

1 Chapter One: First Lesson in Mindreading Technique
1 The Baker Switch
6 Bill-Epathy

10 Chapter Two: New Light on the Center Tear
12 The Baker Method of Reading the Center Tear
18 Co-Incidentally

21 Chapter Three: Telephone Mysteries
21 A Telemirakel
26 Over the Phone
30 Telephony

32 Chapter Four: Mental Magic Effects
32 No-Nomonics
34 Baker's Eight Card Trick
37 Thought Transmission
40 Al Baker's Envelope Switch
46 Envelope as an Accessory
50 Chicken Feed
53 Parlor Telepathy
57 Impossible
59 Pellet Reading
65 Out of the Air
72 Baker Switch Number 2
76 Secret Reading of Billets
80 Pseudo-Fortune Telling Seance
85 The Dean Man's Name
88 Mental card Tricks
90 The Pulse of the People
93 The Stethoscope
97 Telepathy for Two
100 Unconscious Clairvoyance
104 The Magic Bell

107 Appendix:
107 Adrian Plate's System of Mnemonics
113 Fortune Telling Significance of Playing Cards
116 Recapitulation of Al Baker's Rules

Personal

Owner Bryan-Keith Taylor
Location Magic Library (Home)
Index 3827
Added Date Jul 01, 2017 03:06:50
Modified Date Apr 06, 2026 14:21:06

Value

Book Condition Very Good

Notes

Al Baker

Born Albert Baker [1] September 04, 1874
Poughkeepsie, New York

Died October 24, 1951 (age 77)
Brooklyn, N.Y.

Categories

Books by Al Baker
Al Baker (b.1874-d.1951) was a professional magician born in Poughkeepsie, New York. Baker was known by most of his magical contemporaries as an outstanding M.C., author, and inventor.


Contents
1 Biography
2 Honors and Awards
3 Bibliography
3.1 Books
3.2 Manuscripts
3.3 Contributions
3.4 Compilations
4 Quotes
5 References

Biography
By the time Baker was 21, he was already working in Vaudeville as magician and ventriloquist. Later he was performer at Coney Island as a Chautauqua & Lyceum headliner, where he also had a photo studio.

Al Baker was one of the greatest entertainers in magic and combined original effects with a natural sense of humor. His stage act consisted of the following: Cake in the hat, Card from the hat, dyeling silks, Knot in the silk, The Pack that cuts itself, thirty card trick, & torn and restored paper napkin.

Baker was an inventor of many tricks that he marketed including his Dictionary Test, Al Baker Slates and his version of the Rice bowls. Many of his silk magic effects were included in Rice's Encyclopedia of Silk Magic. One of his creations was the Purse Frame.

Baker opened a magic shop with Martin Sunshine in Times Square.[2][3][4][5][6][7]

Honors and Awards

Dean of the Society of American Magicians from 1941-1951.

Bibliography

Books
Al Baker's Book One (1933)
Al Baker's Book Two (1935)
Magical Ways and Means (1941)
Mental Magic (1949)
Pet Secrets (1951)

Manuscripts
The Twenty-Five Dollar Manuscript (Ca. 1923) (A mimeographed pirated version titled "This will open your eyes: Al Baker's Exclusive Twenty-five dollar Manuscript" was released around 1951)
Al Baker's Pack (1932)
Cardially Yours (1934)

Effects 1, 2, 3 (Ca. 1939)
Card Trio (1948)
Contributions
Baker regularly contributed to The Sphinx and other magic magazines.

Compilations
The Secret Ways of Al Baker by The Miracle Factory (2003), Todd Karr, CONVERSATIONS WITH JAY MARSHALL, page 55

Quotes
"No matter how bad the show, or how little the kids, or how hard it is to get their attention, take a live rabbit and coil of paper out of your hat and you're safe." The Secret Ways of Al Baker, page 135
" "We must never forget that the details of presentation are what make a trick. And study and thought brings us those details. If you have a trick you like but never do because of some weak or unnatural or illogical part, don't lay it aside—just begin thinking. What I mean is thinking about that part. You will be surprised how a brilliant idea will crop up and you will be surprised even more that you hadn't thought of it before. The usual trouble is that we don't bother to think long enough or hard enough" - "What Makes a Trick" by Al Baker, The Sphinx, Vol.40, No.1 (March 1941)." (Which is usually paraphrased as "Magicians stop thinking too soon!”)

References
↑ The Sphinx, Vol. L, No. Four, June 1951, OFFICIAL MEMBERSHIP LIST OF SAM JUNE, 1951, page 140
↑ http://www.compumagic.com/sam35/al_baker.html
↑ http://www.nysun.com/new-york/coney-island-love-and-magic/37515/
↑ M-U-M, Vol. 72, No. 4, September 1982, The Incomparible Al Baker, Magician of the Month, page 7
↑ Genii Forum Book of the Month
↑ archive.denisbehr.de
↑ Cover Genii, Vol. 12, No. 7, March 1948
Wikipedia-logo.png This page incorporated content from Al Baker (magic),
a page hosted on Wikipedia. Please consult the history of the original page to see a list of its authors. Therefor, this article is also available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License

The Sphinx, Vol. 31, No. 4, June 1932, Who's Who in Magic, page 156
Cover, The Sphinx, Vol. 43, No. 2, April 1944, Al Baker, page 32
Cover, Linking Ring, Vol. 25, No. 4, June 1945, Al Baker, Great Magician, Humorist and Dean of the S.A.M. by John Braun, page 15
Cover, The Sphinx, Vol. 47, No. 1, March 1948, The Cover, page 4
Cover, Tops Magazine, Vol. 13, No. 4, April 1948, Al Baker – His Golden Anniversary Year, page 4
Goodliffe's Abracadabra, Vol. 7, No. 167, April 1949, American Profiles, by Robert Lund - Al Baker, page 166
The Linking Ring, Vol. 31, No. 2, April 1951, The New York Mid-Century Parade, by Eddie Clever, Al Baker, page 51
The Linking Ring, Vol. 31, No. 9, November 1951, AL BAKER September 4, 1874 - October 24, 1951, page 12
M-U-M, Vol. 41, No. 7, December 1951, Al Baker 1874-1951, page 181
The Sphinx, Vol. 50, No. 6, December 1951, In Memoriam, AL BAKER September 4, 1874 – October 24, 1951, page 255
Tops Magazine, Vol. 16, No. 12, December 1951, MORE ABOUT AL BAKER, page 21
M-U-M, Vol. 59, No. 5, October 1969, Al Baker (Dean of Society of American Magicians), by Tom Hawbecker (Past National President), page 36
M-U-M, Vol. 91, No. 12, May 2002, The Deeans of the S.A.M. - Al Baker September 4,1874 - October 31,1951, Dean: 1941-1951, page 21
Cover, Genii Magazine, Vol. 66, No. 2, February 2003, FEATURES
The Secret Ways of Al Baker, by Todd Karr (2003)
Bio-bibliographisches Lexikon der Zauberkünstler Edition Volker Huber, April 2002, Baker, Al USA Zauberkünstler; Zauberkunst-Fachschriftsteller (*04.09.1874 Pougheepsie, New York; †31.10.1951 [24.10.1951?] New York), page 29