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Magic Tricks
Hunter, Norman (Norman George Lorimer Hunter)

Magic Tricks

(formerly, The Puffin Book of Magic)

Penguin Books (1972)
10

Genre

  • Conjuring

Subject

  • Magic tricks

Plot

Hunter, Norman: Magic Tricks
©1968 Norman Hunter, Penguin Books, England (formerly, The Puffin Book of Magic)
©1972 Norman Hunter, Penguin Books, England
Softcover, perfect-bound, 5.5x8.5", 128 pages

Comments: Originally published as The Puffin Book of Magic. Illustrations by Jill McDonald.While a book for beginners, this one has some excellent tricks beyond the ordinary.
Contents (from book):

9 Helpful Hints And Awful Warnings

13 Tricks With Ordinary Things
15 Cutting A Girl In Two: with a rope
18 Making A Puffin: paper pieces on a sheet of paper form into a picture
21 Change Please: a coin is made into change in a folded paper
23 Visiting Day: a simple cups and balls routine with paper balls and saucers
27 A Royal Holiday: gimmick card trick
30 Eyes In Your Fingers: magician pulls selected cards out of the hat
33 Find The Card: Spectator two pulls spectator one's card selection out of his pocket
37 The Obedient Card: card selection appears at chosen position in the deck
39 Radio Post: two cards visually selected by spectators vanish from half the deck to appear in the other half
44 Silk From Nowhere: three methods of producing a silk
47 Silk Soup: handkerchief vanishes and appears under a saucer
50 Wild Animals: a picture of a shouted out wild animal appears in a photo frame
55 Making Time Fly: borrowed watch vanishes but is recovered
61 Broken Biscuits: broken and restored cookie!
65 Tricks With Special Things And How To Make The Things
67 Conjurer’s Handy Box: for getting and disposing of props
69 Aunt Jane’s Knitting Bag: a color changing "gag bag"
74 The Handkerchief Changes Colour
77 The Magic Chalk: Writes in colors
80 A Good First Trick: an opener wand from purse
83 Confetti Squash: confetti to Lemonade
86 Magic Flowers, A Professor Branestawm Sort Of Trick: pictures of flowers turn into baskets of flowers
94 The Escaping Handkerchief: silk escapes from plastic tumbler from which you've taken a drink
96 A Chinese Sort Of Story: a stage act with Chinese shop banners that re-appear
104 The Candle Of Ho Wat Fun: while it appears that tea, rice and a silk are moved to new boxes, they return
108 Tew Tewbes: silk production from apparently empty tubes
113 Special Magic For Weeny Wizards And Fuddle-fingers
114 Almost Self Working Tricks
115 Flying Papers: selected color paper vanishes and flies across the room
117 Curious Clips: paper clips multiply as they are dumped in a container
119 A Thought-Reading Trick: using a confederate
121 The Vanishing Sixpence: a simple coin vanish
123 Group Magic
125 Putting Together a Magic Show

Credits

Illustrator Jill McDonald

Personal

Owner Bryan-Keith Taylor
Location Magic Library (Home)
Index 4744
Added Date Jul 01, 2017 03:06:49
Modified Date Apr 06, 2026 14:22:45

Value

Book Condition Very Good

Notes

Norman Hunter (writer)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Norman Hunter
Born 23 November 1899
Sydenham, London, England
Died 23 February 1995 (aged 95)
Staines, Surrey, England
Occupation Children's writer
Known for Professor Branestawm
Spouse Sylvia Rangel (married 1923)
Children Mary Sylvia Grosch, Barbara Cecelia Bowden, John Phillip Hunter
Parent(s) Joseph Hunter, Minnie Elizabeth Smith
Norman George Lorimer Hunter (23 November 1899 – 23 February 1995)[1] was a British writer of children's literature. He is particularly known for creating the Professor Branestawm book series.

Early life
Hunter was born in Sydenham, England, on 23 November 1899. He attended Beckenham County School for Boys (later known as Beckenham and Penge Grammar School and then Langley Park School for Boys). He had three siblings, Edith Mira Hunter, Gladys Minnie Hunter and Cyril Joseph Hunter. His father died when he was 9 and his brother, Cyril was killed in the First World War in Flanders, France. Hunter left school to volunteer for service in the London Irish Rifles in the First World War.[2] He was awarded the British War Medal and Victory Medal for his service.

Career
After the First World War Hunter became an advertising copywriter. In the 1930s he performed as a stage magician in Bournemouth and in the London Magic Theatre of John Nevil Maskelyne and David Devant. He was also a member of The Magic Circle. Hunter wrote popular books on writing for advertising, brain-teasers and conjuring, among many other topics, but his best-known works were about the character Professor Branestawm, originally written for radio. The first book, The Incredible Adventures of Professor Branestawm, was published in hardback in 1933 with illustrations by W. Heath Robinson; the second, Professor Branestawm's Treasure Hunt in 1937 with drawings by James Arnold. George Adamson illustrated the reissue of Professor Branestawm's Treasure Hunt in 1966, and when Norman Hunter brought out his third book in the series in 1970 after a gap of more than thirty years, Adamson provided the illustrations. Two further Professor Branestawm titles were then published with Adamson's drawings. Other artists were to provide illustrations for later books in the series: Gerald Rose; David Hughes; Jill McDonald, and Derek Cousins. Many of the books were reissued in Puffin Books, The Incredible Adventures of Professor Branestawm under Eleanor Graham's editorship in 1946, and many others under Kaye Webb's in the 1960s and 1970s.

Having worked as an advertising manager for a Department Store in Bournemouth, Hunter returned to London during the Second World War and worked for the Advertising Agency, S.H. Benson as a copywriter. In 1949 he emigrated to South Africa on the Cape Town Castle. He was employed as chief copywriter for P.N. Barrett & Co from 1949 to 1959 and then Central Advertising from 1959 to 1970, both in Johannesburg. After his retirement in 1970, he once again returned to Staines, London, where Thames Television had just produced an eight-part TV series, Professor Branestawm. He continued writing in his retirement, up until the age of 86 and his last book was published in 1983.

Personal life
Norman Hunter married Sylvia Maria Rangel in 1923 in Edmonton, London and they had three children. In about 1934 the family moved to Dorset and lived in various homes in and around Bournemouth. The family then moved to London during the Second World War at the beginning of The Blitz. Hunter and his family, together with their Bullmastiff called Midas, ended up living in a single room in Amersham. They relocated to Chalfont St Giles in Buckinghamshire, and then to Bromley, Kent to avoid the bombings. During their stay in Bromley, known as “Bomb Alley” the V-1 flying bomb and V-2 rocket, started coming from Germany aimed at London. However, they sometimes fell short and crashed in Kent. One night a V-1 landed in the Bromley shopping area. The blast fanned outward and did a lot of damage, including to the side of the family's rented house. As there was a shortage of accommodation at the end of the Second World War, Hunter lived on a boat on the River Thames with his family. In 1949 the family emigrated to South Africa. Hunter was 49 at the time. He lived in South Africa until his retirement when he returned with his wife, Sylvia to England. They lived in Staines, London where Hunter continued to write children’s books and work on a model theatre, a replica of the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane. This model theatre is now housed at the University of Bristol Theatre Collection. Hunter was also a member of the Savage Club. His wife died in 1982 and he continued to live in Staines until his death on 23 February 1995.

Works
(Complete):

Simplified Conjuring for All: a collection of new tricks needing no special skill or apparatus for their performance with suitable patter, C. Arthur Pearson (1923), new edition published by Hamlyn (1999)
Advertising Through the Press: a guide to press publicity, Sir I. Pitman & Sons (1925)
New and Easy Magic : a further series of novel magical experiments needing no special skill or apparatus for their performance with suitable patter, C. Arthur Pearson (1925)
Hey Presto: A Book of Effects for Conjurers, Edward Bagshawe (1931)
The Bad Barons of Crashbania: Vol. 42, Continuous Stories, Jolly Books (Blackwell, 1932), illustrated by Eve Garnett
The Incredible Adventures of Professor Branestawm, John Lane, The Bodley Head (1933), first appeared in The Merry-Go-Round (April to October 1929 - 5 issues), Basil Blackwell (1929); Penguin Books, Puffin Books (1946; 1969; 1973); The Bodley Head (1965; 1988); Penguin Red Fox (2008; 2011); Penguin Random House, Vintage Children's Classics (2013), illustrated by W. Heath Robinson
New Conjuring without Skill, The Bodley Head (1935)
Professor Branestawm's Treasure Hunt, John Lane, The Bodley Head (1937); Puffin Books (1966), illustrated by George Adamson
Larky Legends (1938), republished as The Dribblesome Teapots and Other Incredible Stories, The Bodley Head (1969)
Successful Conjuring for Amateurs, Pearson (1951)
The Puffin Book of Magic, Puffin Books (1968; 1970; 1973), illustrated by Jill McDonald, republished as Norman Hunter's Book of Magic, The Bodley Head (1974)
Magic tricks, Penguin Books, Puffin Books (1968; 1972), illustrated by Jill McDonald, formerly The Puffin Book of Magic, Puffin Books (1968)
The Dribblesome Teapots and Other Incredible Stories, The Bodley Head (1969); Puffin Books (1971); Penguin Red Fox Classics (2013), illustrated by Fritz Wegner
The Peculiar Triumph of Professor Branestawm, The Bodley Head (1970); Puffin Books (1970); Penguin Red Fox (2012), illustrated by George Adamson
The Home Made Dragon, The Bodley Head (1971), illustrated by Fritz Wegner
Professor Branestawm Up the Pole, The Bodley Head (1972); Puffin Books (1972), illustrated by George Adamson
Professor Branestawm's Dictionary, The Bodley Head (1973), illustrated by Derek Cousins
Professor Branestawm's Dictionary, Puffin Books (1974), illustrated by Derek Cousins, with cover by George Adamson
The Frantic Phantom and Other Incredible Stories, Random House (1973); Puffin Books (1976), illustrated by Geraldine Spence
Wizards Are A Nuisance, BBC Books (1973), illustrated by Quentin Blake
Norman Hunter's Book of magic, The Bodley Head (1974), illustrated by Jill McDonald
Professor Branestawm's Great Revolution, The Bodley Head (1974), illustrated by David Hughes; Puffin (1977), illustrated by George Adamson
The Home-made Dragon and Other Incredible Stories, Puffin Books (1974), illustrated by Fritz Wegner
Long Live Their Majesties, Blackie and Son Limited (1975), illustrated by Sara Silcock
Dust up at the Royal Disco: and Other Stories, Puffin / Penguin (1975; 1978), illustrated by Fritz Wegner
Professor Branestawm's Do-It-Yourself Handbook, The Bodley Head (1976) ISBN 978-0-370-10847-6; Puffin (1979) ISBN 978-0-14-031148-8, illustrated by Jill McDonald
Professor Branestawm's Compendium of Conundrums, Riddles, Puzzles, Brain Twiddlers and Dotty Descriptions, The Bodley Head (1975); Puffin Books (1977), illustrated by Derek Cousins
Professor Branestawm Round the Bend, The Bodley Head (1977); Puffin Books (1980), illustrated by Derek Cousins
Vanishing Ladies, and Other Magic, The Bodley Head (1978) ISBN 978-0-370-30078-8, illustrated by Jill McDonald
Count Bakwerdz on the Carpet, The Bodley Head (1979); Puffin Books (1982), illustrated by Babette Cole.
Professor Branestawm's Perilous Pudding, The Bodley Head (1979); Puffin Books (1983), illustrated by Derek Cousins
The Best of Branestawm, The Bodley Head (1980), illustrated by George Adamson, Derek Cousins, W. Heath Robinson and Jill McDonald
Sneeze and Be Slain and Other Incredible Stories, The Bodley Head (1980), illustrated by Babette Cole
Professor Branestawm and the Wild Letters, The Bodley Head (1981), illustrated by Gerald Rose
Professor Branestawm's Pocket Motor Car, The Bodley Head (1981), combined edition of Professor Branestawm's Pocket Motor Car & Professor Branestawm And the Wild Letters, Penguin Random House / Puffin Books (1982), illustrated by Gerald Rose
Professor Branestawm's Mouse War, The Bodley Head (1982); Penguin (Young Puffin Books) (1984), illustrated by Gerald Rose
Professor Branestawm's Building Bust-Up, The Bodley Head (1982), illustrated by Gerald Rose
Professor Branestawm's Crunchy Crockery, The Bodley Head (1983) combined edition of Professor Branestawm's Crunchy Crockery And Professor Branestawm's HairRaising Idea (Young Puffin Read Alone Series), Puffin Books (1994), illustrated by Gerald Rose
Professor Branestawm's Hair-Raising Idea, The Bodley Head (1983), illustrated by Gerald Rose
Professor Branestawm Stories, Penguin Red Fox (2000; 2017), illustrated by W. Heath Robinson and others
Adaptations
Jackanory. Kenneth Williams read ' The Dribblesome Teapots' . Broadcast: Mon., 20th Nov.1978, BBC One.

References
Nicholas Tucker (28 February 1995). "Obituary: Norman Hunter | People". The Independent. Archived from the original on 21 June 2022. Retrieved 23 May 2016.
"h2g2 – Professor Branestawm – Literary Inventor – A637878". BBC. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 23 May 2016.
External links

Wikiquote has quotations related to Norman Hunter (writer).
Children's literature portal
BBC-H2G2
Books at Random
Norman Hunter at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
Norman Hunter at Library of Congress, with 19 library catalogue records (previous page of browse report, under 'Unter, Norman, 1899–' without '1995')
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Categories: 1899 births1995 deathsBritish children's writersPeople from Sydenham, LondonMilitary personnel from the London Borough of LewishamBritish Army personnel of World War ILondon Irish Rifles soldiersTerritorial Force soldiersWriters from the London Borough of Lewisham