Handcrafted Card
Magic
conceived, written and illustrated by Denis Behr
Foreword by Pit Hartling
Introduction
Brute Force
Opening
An opener that does its job - knocking the spectators out with three rapid-fire
effects in no time.
Plop
Control any four-of-a-kind without looking at the faces of the cards.
The Culling Procedure
Plop – The Effect
A Trick for
Allen Kennedy
One of the cleanest Center Deal demonstrations.
Magic
Monthly
A strong two-phase four-of-a-kind production with an emotional hook that is a
real workhorse.
Finding The
Way Home
The concepts and ideas in this section will change your stack-work and make it
much more deceptive.
Possible strategies for rearranging cards systematically
“The Tantalizer”
A Trick for Allen Kennedy
Way into “The Tantalizer”
Packet Trick
Red-Black Division into Stack
Liebenow’s Card Peeling
- A Gambling
Demonstration An easy gambling routine that can be followed by anybody - interested in
gambling or not.
- Oil &
Water A real laymen pleaser. Try this routine and you'll want to keep it in your
repertoire forever.
- Oil &
Water Finale What Daryl's "Ultimate Ambition" is to the Ambitious Card plot;
"Oil & Water Finale" is to the Oil and Water plot.
- Gray Matters An ultra-clean challenge location to fool anybody.
Epilogue
Bibliography
English
language, hardbound with dust jacket, 5.8 x 8.3 inches, about 90 pages
This is a book that not only
justifies its existence by means of innovative material and original thinking,
but which represents the mind of a thoughtful and tasteful creator who pays attention
to myriad tiny details that can make all the difference between mediocre magic
and beautiful illusions. (...)
This is the way magic books should be written.
Jamy Ian Swiss (Genii Magazine)
Most card books present handlings or
better ways of accomplishing things you already do. Handcrafted Card Magic gave
me new things to do in already exceptional ways. This is a great book.
Ricky Smith (M-U-M Magazine)
His hands are so large that he can palm
playing cards sideways without the fear of detection.
John Lovick (MAGIC Magazine)
There is some fine thought in this
material. My favorite pieces are "A Trick for Allen Kennedy" (a
surprise, since I'm not usually drawn to gambling effects) and "Oil and
Water Finale". However, there is much else to admire.
Stephen Minch
The chapter, however, that I predict will
standout as one of the most important and influential contributions to the
study of stacked-deck magic is “Finding The Way Home”.
Pit Hartling (Foreword)