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Expert At The Card Table

S.W. Erdnase

Magic, Inc.

(Based on 1 review)
Released in 1901 by S.W. Erdnase, the book covers everything from professional secrets to card tricks, and everything in between. Explained in detail and generously sprinkled with illustrations. S. W. Erdnase has been acclaimed by many as one of the finest card handlers in the entire world.

The Classic Treatise On Card Manipulation

For almost a century, this book has been considered indispensable to attaining the highest level of card mastery. In it, S.W. Erdnase, a supreme master of card manipulation, teaches card enthusiasts how to perform the dazzling tricks and sleights-many of them how own creations-that made him famous.

The first section of the book deals with card table artifice, or, to put it more bluntly, cheating at cards. Step by step, Mr. Erdnase demonstrates his own systems of false shuffling, false riffling and cutting, dealing from the bottom and such slick moves as palming cards, "skinning the hand," even three-card monte.

The second section covers legerdemain: the art of forcing a card, one- and two-hand transformations, the devious "slide" and more. Card handlers will love Erdnase's selection of dazzling card tricks, including The Acrobatic Jacks, The Exclusive Coterie, The Divining Rod, The Invisible Flight, a Mind Reading Tick and many others.

In an informative foreword to this edition, Martin Gardner relates the unhappy details of the author's personal life, and recounts the history of this famous book, whose methods, Mr. Gardner asserts, "are as useful today by magicians and card hustlers as they were in 1902. This book is still the bible of card 'mechanics,' and as much a delight to read as it was in the early years of this century."

"The Expert at the Card Table is the most famous, carefully studied book ever published on the art of manipulating cards at gaming tables." -from the Foreword by Martin Gardner

Pages 130 - Soft Bound

Reviews

Paul Budd

Official Reviewer

Jun 15, 2010

There's a reason they call them classics, right?! A must have for any serious Cardician. While the language is a bit obtuse for modern audiences......someone who's persistent can get through it just fine.
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