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Reflections

Guimaraes, Helder

Dan and Dave Buck

(Based on 2 reviews)
Foray deeper into the mind of Helder GuimarĂ£es, a supreme conjuror and philosopher of the art. Discover the secrets to his most talked about effects. Be inspired from his profound thinking and psychological analysis. Immerse yourself with the finer elements of magic that transcend amateur to professional.

Reflections is a personal manifestation of Helder's passion for magic featuring five remarkable effects with cards. Every nuance is explained. From conception, technique and audience management to creative solutions, the end result is enlightening.

However, this is not a guide for the magician wanting to learn a few quick tricks. These are audience tested performance pieces meant to be studied and applied.

Beautifully bound in a soft linen, Reflections is 150 pages with 60 illlustrations.

Reviews

Jeff Stone

Official Reviewer

Jul 07, 2014

After reading the first several pages of this book, I decided that I was probably not going to be happy with it. Of course, however, duty requires that I finish the book and form an opinion when I'm done. Let's get all the easy stuff out of the way first; then I'll delve into some of the details.



Production Quality: Excellent. It's a beautiful hard bound 150 page 5 x 8 (ish) book with excellent quality paper, clever art work and well organized chapters. Other than a few minor issues with the translation leading to a few typos and minor grammar issues, this was a darn near flawless production.



So the real question is the content. That's where I got turned off . . . at first. The book starts with actual mathematical formulas (literally) to describe a cards across routine. It was painful to read and took several attempts for me to begin to grasp what he was saying. It could be that I'm just slow (very likely) or that he was waaaaay over thinking the plot . . . I'm open for it to be either of the two or even a combonation of both.



However, I pushed through. I'm very glad I did. The basic structure of the book is to discuss a theory (in sometimes excrutiatingly painful detail). Then to show how that theory applies to a particular plot. Then finally to show how that theory was (or could be) put into practice to create an effect.



Oftentimes people ask creative people questions like "How do you create ideas?" or "What's the creative process like?" and a whole slew of similar questions. This book is a very, very good answer to many of those questions. You get to see inside the mind of a genuinely gifted magician. You take a ride with him to places where sometimes the journey is better than the destination and other times, vice versa.



There were cases where I loved the end result and the process, or only one or the other, but in the end, I came away with several things.





  • Some clever techniques that I can use to fine tune my own presentations

  • Some new ways at looking at my actions, words and methods

  • A splitting headache

  • . . . and A new found respect for Helder Guimaraes




$40 is pretty competitive in the magic book market these days. So I think the pricing is in line. There are several excellent effects and even more excellent "creation" sections. If you're looking to drastically improve the way you look at and think about magic, this definitely fits the bill.



Final Verdict:
4 stars with a Stone Status of Gem

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Bryce Kuhlman

Official Reviewer

Apr 28, 2013

I'm so happy to be living in a time when global communication has become so easy. For the longest time, magic from other countries was only available to people that traveled there and spoke the language. I'm particularly excited about the amount of Spanish magic that is now available to us here in the United States. These guys are masters of our craft and we have a lot to learn from them.

We've all heard of the "big names" like Ascanio and Tamariz. Now we're being introduced to names such as Dan DaOrtiz, Miguel Angel Gea and Helder Guimaraes, the author of Reflections (technically from Portugal, but cut from the same cloth as the Spaniards).

In terms of chapter count, the book is about 50% theory and 50% effects. But the whole book is a theoretical treatise. The amount of detail covered in the explanations is, in many ways, even more important that the chapters devoted to theory.

I even have to be careful using the term theory to describe the contents. Helder's analyses are closer to science than philosophy. While the magic is close-up, most of the strategies can be applied to any style of magic or size of audience.

Even if you don't give a hoot about the theory, the magic presented in this little book is some of the strongest I've ever read. If you're a close-up worker and looking for real workers, you will not be disappointed!
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