Plot
Mulholland, John: Mulholland's Book of Magic
©1963 Charles Scribner's Sons;
Paper, Perfect-bound, 329 pages
©1963 Charles Scribner's Sons;
Hardcover, 329 pages
©2001 republished Dover Publications
Paper, Perfect-bound, 344 pages
ISBN: 0486417727
Comments (Dover Publications): Mulholland provides illustrated instructions for mastering scores of magical feats: card tricks relying on an easy memory device, extemporaneous tricks such as making a coin vanish and then reappear in a bread roll, tricks for entertaining youngsters, magical thought transference, and other exploits of mystifying wizardry.
This Dover edition, first published in 2001, is an unabridged, unaltered republication of the work originally published in 1963 by Charles Scribner's Sons, New York.
Contents: (descriptions from the book's original table of contents)
1 Chapter 1 Magic And The Magician: What Magic Is, Why It Works, And The General Principles A Magician Has To Follow
10 Chapter 2 Sundry Mysteries: extemporaneous magic with borrowed objects
10 The Freely Selected Card: two methods of finding, and four ways of disclosing, the chosen card
17 Rings And Strings: instantaneous release of several finger rings tied with cords
21 Magic Spelling: three ways of showing that playing card can spell
24 Card Automation: knowing which card was chosen, while seemingly doing nothing
29 Coins, Paper Napkins, And Olives: Coins disappear, torn paper napkins become whole, and olives change to lumps of sugar - all by the means of this single, simple trick
37 Chapter 3 Tricky Tricks: Impromptu feats which stress laughs and surprise rather than mystery, many presented as challenges
37 Camel And The Needle's Eyes: Ways to prove holes in paper are larger than they appear
41 41¢ And A Bottle: The magician alone can remove the paper from under the stack of coins
42 Falling Down: Making a piece of paper fall at the same speed as a coin
43 The Submarine Coin: Only the magician fails to get wet
44 The Friendly Cards: A card trick in which the spectator does everything
45 Speed Contest: Under the rules, only a magician can tear paper into thirds
46 Liquid Smoke: Changing the quality of smoke
48 The Jumping Arrows: Lines drawn on a card annoyingly move around
51 The Little Indian: A handkerchief is sculpted into an Indian head
54 On The Mark: The magician's aim is more accurate at dropping cards
56 Perfume - Odor: Prophecy by the sense of smell
58 Chapter 4 Seemingly Extemporaneous Magic: The spectators never know, but these effects require some prior preparation
58 The Bread Winner: A coin vanishes and reappears inside a roll
60 Money No Object: A dollar bill causes a quarter to make an invisible trip
62 Hot Money: Fire causes a coin to pierce a plate
66 Some Snap: A rubber band shows life as well as elasticity
69 Kikeri, Kikeri, Ki: A sex detector
71 Arches, Loops And Whorls: Invisible fingerprints identify the owner's business card
74 Wood Or Metal?: It is wood through metal, or metal through wood?
76 The Spooky Key: A key turns of its own volition
77 The Pirate And The Strongbox: The spectators always choose the wrong keys
80 Chapter 5 The Hungry Jackass: A method, depending on an easy memory device, by which the magician can perform a wide variety of amazing feats with playing cards
82 To Know Which Card Has Been Selected
83 To Know By Sound Which Card Is Missing From The Deck
83 To Know How Many Cards Are Taken From The Deck
84 The Fortune Telling Card: The deck discloses the selected cards
85 A Correct Prophecy: The magician writes the name of the card to be chosen
87 Dealing The Winning Hand: In either Bridge Or Poker, the magician holds the best cards
88 By Number: How to know the numerical location, in the deck, of any card
89 Shuffling The deck and a trick in connection therewith: the trick which makes the others seem impossible
92 Chapter 6 Further Mysteries: Astounding tricks needing some preparation and several also requiring simple pieces of equipment
92 Matches On Parade: Paper matches are made to march
94 Return Fire: Burnt matches after disappearing and reappearing can again be lighted
98 Scientist's Dollar Dinner: A food tablet and a dollar bill mysteriously change places
103 String For A Parcel: Making two pieces of string into one long piece
107 By The Sense Of Touch: Without looking, the magician finds in the deck the three selected cards
110 Beelzebub's Letter: A letter mailed yesterday contains a coin borrowed today
115 The Flight Of A Coin: A quarter disappears in flame and reappears inside an hermetically sealed package
121 Chapter 7 Exceptional Magic: Tricks of striking effects depending upon equipment easy to make
121 Boy And Box Of Candy: The magical peregrinations of a box of candy make a delightful mystery
131 Magic Dye: The magician colors silk handkerchiefs for a skeptic audience
137 Another Century: A silk handkerchief disappears and ties itself between two other silks
145 Obedient Colors: Painted wooden blocks mysteriously rearrange themselves in a pattern chosen by a spectator
156 Bottomless Boxes: Where nothing is, nor could be, the magician discovers gifts for the audience
162 Chapter 8 Especially For Children: Magic conforming to the more exacting requirements of the reasoning of childhood
162 Ball, Paper And Nothing: Obeying helpful signs, these objects change places
171 Traveling On A Wish: A small image makes a magical journey to enact a tale of ancient India
178 Coin And Cord: A Coin, After disappearing, penetrates a bag, a ball of cord and a box
183 Flying Silk: A handkerchief travels invisibly
185 Strawberry Milk: Plain milk changes by plucking the fruit off printed cloth
188 The Elusive Block: A solid block of wood first escapes from restraint, then disappears and reappears
200 Chapter 9 More Exceptional Magic: Truly miraculous effects based on the use of ingenious equipment, which can be made in a home workshop
200 Ho Chang: A brass idol incredibly disappears from the hands of the magician and reappears inside a box which had proven to be empty
214 The Astronaut Cards: Selected cards mysteriously rise from a shuffled deck
221 The Sheikh's Ring: A finger ring escapes from knots in a string, travels invisibly and reties itself to a fishline
227 Flowers - With Thanks: A borrowed ring becomes lost, only to be found again in a gift box containing a corsage
237 A Card and Cigarettes: A selected card mysteriously finds its way into a closed cigarette case, held by a spectator
242 Chapter 10 Beyond the Five Senses: Demonstrations which apparently are the result of super mental powers
242 The Clever Poltergeist: A mischievous ghost rattles a spoon to answer questions correctly
252 Chromatic Vibrations: Sensitivity to color and thought transference are combined to reveal the name of one country of the world
257 10,000 to 1: Numbers selected by one person are identical with those another finds by chance in a telephone directory
266 ESP: Magic takes the uncertainty out of extra sensory perception
272 Sight Unseen: Sorting ESP cards while blindfolded
274 Chapter 11 Magical Thought Transference: A system whereby the magician can communicate secretly to his assistant descriptions of playing cards, money, jewelry, and those miscellaneous articles a man has in his pockets and a woman carries in her handbag
274 Mind Signals
287 Chapter 12 Tricks Unlimited: A variety of completely different magic, some of which depends upon combinations or changes of tricks described in previous pages and other entirely new
287 Platform Versions of Two Small Tricks
288 Two Variations for the Jumping Arrows
289 An Addition To Kikeri Kikeri Ki
289 Three Tricks With Cigars
290 ESP Easel Used For A Trick For Men
291 ESP Easel Used For A Trick For Children
292 The Cigarette Case Used With A Prediction
293 Two Additional Tricks With The Case
294 A Trick With Cards And Pennies
297 A Trick With Dollar Bills
301 A Trick With Words
305 A Card Trick Depending Only On Sight
306 A Trick With A Business Card
308 Three Tricks Based On Science
312 Chapter 13 Concluding Secrets: Useful information for a magician; such as how to practice; what magic to show when, where and for whom; how to avoid errors and control stage fright; and further notes on properties, patter and people
The Definitive Manual By The World-Famouse Authority On Modern Magic
Personal
| Owner |
Bryan-Keith Taylor |
| Location |
Magic Library (Home) Shelf R |
| Index |
5107 |
| Added Date |
Jul 01, 2017 03:06:49 |
| Modified Date |
Apr 06, 2026 14:23:23 |
Notes
John Mulholland (1898-1970)
John Muhlholland was born in 1898 in Chicago, and was first inspired to become a magician by seeing a performance of Harry Kellar's. He moved to Manhattan as a young man with his mother. An accomplished performer by his teenage years, Mulholland went on to an impressive career as a professional magician and authority on the subject. In the 1930s, he assumed editorship of The Sphinx, at that time the world's largest and most respected magic magazine. Mulholland had an uparalleled collection of magic memorabilia and apparatus that is now largely owned by David Copperfield. Inventor of the Mulholland Box. A one-time consultant to the article on conjuring in the Encyclopedia Britannica, he is credited with helping to make magic intellectually respectable, and wrote numerous books on the subject.
Among his written works are Quicker than the Eye (1932), Story of Magic (1935), The Art of Illusion (1944), and Book of Magic (1963).
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John Mulholland
Born: June 9, 1898
Chicago, Illinois
Died: February 25, 1970 (age 71)
New York City, New York
Nationality American
John Mulholland (b.1898-d.1970) was born in Chicago, but moved to New York City when young with his mother. He started performing as a teenager, and went on to become a widely respected authority on magic.
Contents
1 Career in Magic
2 Career with U.S. Intelligence
3 Death
4 Books by
5 References
Career in Magic
Mulholland was taught by John William Sargent. During his career, he performed in forty-two countries, authored ten books on magic, and performed at the White house eight times. His 90-minute stage show was carried in two suitcases. He also served as a consultant on conjuring for the Encyclopedia Britannica and the Merriam-Webster Dictionary. He was, at one time, the only magician listed in "Who's Who in America".
He also invented the "Mulholland Box" (a type of Okito coin box).
In the 1930s, he took over The Sphinx, the largest magic magazine at it's time, after the death of A. M. Wilson, and continued as the editor for 23 years. Mulholland stopped the Sphinx to become a consultant to the newly created CIA in 1953, although he told subscribers it was due to health reasons.
Mulholland's 1944 book The Art of Illusion: Magic for Men To Do was selected by the Council on Books in Wartime to be reprinted as an Armed Services Edition (a small paperback version distributed to U.S. military personnel). It is estimated that almost 100,000 copies of the Armed Services Edition were printed (in November 1944), making it probably the most popular magic book of World War Two, by quantity produced.
Career with U.S. Intelligence
Mulholland was recruited by Sidney Gottleib in 1953, for the top secret CIA project known as "MK-ULTRA". His assignments included working with billionaires and inventors, cracking codes and delving into the world of ESP research, experiments with the use of LSD, and writing a manual on deception for use in the Cold War.
He also wrote classified manuscripts for the CIA. Two that have since been de-classified are: "Some Operational Applications of the Art of Deception", and "Recognition Signals" in 1954. Mulholland continued to work for the CIA at least until 1958.
Death
Mulholland died in New York City on February 25, 1970 at age 71.
At the time of his death, Mulholland had one of the largest collections of magic memorabilia and apparatus (including almost all of Houdini's paper archival estate that had not been given to the Library of Congress) and a library of over 4,000 books. Following his death, illusionist David Copperfield purchased most of Mulholland's archival magic estate and library (including the entire Houdini archival collection and library owned by Mulholland) all of which is now housed in Copperfield's International Museum and Library of the Conjuring Arts in Las Vegas.
Books by
Conjurer and Pedagogue (with Milton M. Smith 1924)
Magic in the Making (with Milton M. Smith 1925)
Behind the Magician's Curtain (1928)
Quicker than the Eye (1932)
The Magic and Magicians of the World (1932)
Mulholland's Story of Magic (1935)
Modern Magician: A Pocket Manual of Tricks (1937)
Beware Familiar Spirits (1938)
The Girl in the Cage (a novel with Cortland Fitzsimmons, 1939)
Christmas Conjurer (ca. 1940)
Magic in the Library (1943)
The Art of Illusion: Magic for Men To Do (1944)
Magic for Entertaining, The Early Magic Shows ( Reprint of "Art of Illusions" 1945)
Practical Puppetry (1961)
John Mulholland's Book of Magic (1963)
Magic of the World (1965)
The Magical Mind - Key to Successful Communications (with George Gordon 1967)
References
Wikipedia-logo.png This page incorporated content from John Mulholland (magician),
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
Cover Genii 1937 October
Cover Genii 1964 July
Cover Genii 1965 November
Broken Wand MUM May 1970
Article Genii 2001 April: THE SPHINX AND THE SPY The Clandestine World of John Mulholland By Michael Edwards
Article Genii 2003 August: Some Operational Applications of the Art of Deception
The MagiCIAn: John Mulholland's Secret Life by Ben Robinson (2008)
http://www.frankolsonproject.org/Articles/Mulholland.html
The Official C.I.A. Manual of Trickery and Deception by Melton and Wallace (2009)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sidney_Gottlieb
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MKULTRA
http://www.miraclefactory.net/mulhollandcontents.htm