Secret Art of Magic, The / Evans, Eric & Nowlin Craver / HISTORY AND THEORY

Author: 
Evans, Eric & Nowlin Craver

The Secret Art of Magic is comprised of two sections, essentially two books: "Street Magic & The Art of War" and "The Secret Art of Dispersion." Separate, yet inextricably linked by the paradigm of ancient war strategy.

"Street Magic & The Art of War," by Eric Evans, uses strategies from Sun Tzu's The Art of War to teach the intricacies of street magic-from trick selection, to the pitch, to stopping people, to handling hecklers, to building a crowd, to collecting the hat. Its most profound lessons, however, deal with controlling yourself and your audience-the most critical thing for all performers. Though "Street Magic and The Art of War" is already being called "THE textbook" for street magic, ultimately the most important - and largest, at 170 pages - section of the book is "The Secret Art of Dispersion." It provides a framework to understand, assimilate, and implement deception as never before.

Using an ancient Chinese manuscript of 36 strategies for deception in warfare, "The Secret Art of Dispersion," by Nowlin Craver, teaches a new and expanded approach to misdirection-dispersion. Based on the military concept of dispersing concentration, it not only encompasses the concept of directing/misdirecting attention, but unifies all the ways magicians control their audience's awareness-not just of what they see, but of what they think about (and conversely, and perhaps more importantly, what they don't think about). While misdirection is usually thought of as a tool just for sleight of hand or manipulation, The Secret Art of Dispersion uses a plethora of examples to show the applications of dispersion with apparatus, illusions, stand-up, doves, mentalism, and children's magic as well.

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