by Tomo » Nov 2nd, '06, 18:00
Ooops, I was in a rush and forgot about this thread. Here's my brief review:
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What are we to make of this new volume from the bearded mind-botherer? It certainly covers a lot of ground. Perhaps it’s best described as a collection of topics.
The book opens with an introduction describing how he lost his faith, which for a serious happy clapper must have been quite a jolt. It explains how what we believe is just belief, and though it’s going to get a lot of people quite upset, it’s honest and really does tell us where he’s coming from in unequivocal terms.
Next he turns his attention to magic. This being a mass-market book, however, it exposes very little. His ideas here are about deconstructing the mechanism of a mundane trick and building it back up in terms of both physical and psychological elements into something remarkable. This is far clearer than he ever was in Pure Effect, and though it won’t mean much to the layperson, it’s gold dust if you’re struggling to make your own material convincingly real. He covers a simple coin vanish and a card trick and for many, this will be worth the cover price alone. He then goes on to discuss the theory and practice of ouija boards, pendulums and muscle reading, which for budding mentalists is again valuable insight.
Next up is an excellent chapter on memory, including a range of techniques to enable you to remember long lists of stuff. One of the themes from Pure Effect was compromise, about which he’s particularly passionate. Rather than using gaffed materials or procedures designed to make life easy for the performer, why not just remember a mental look-up table to give the spectator a freer choice? Well, with the techniques in this chapter, you can design mentalism that does just that.
Part four deals with hypnosis and suggestibility. This covers a lot of ground, from Brown’s own experiences of putting on hypnosis shows at university through to NLP and the new age mumbo-jumbo that has grown up around the original premise. He gives a very nice set of ideas for inductions, some of which you could use in a waking environment too. This section finishes with a set f the usual NLP self-help techniques for gaining rapport, curing phobias, increasing your confidence and even self-defence.
Allied to the NLP section is the next, about unconscious communication. This covers truthfulness, spotting lies and the usual stuff covered in most books about psychological magic and body language. It’s a short section, but there are some good ideas, and it goes a long way to explain the mechanisms behind one or two of the tricks in his early TV stuff.
The final part of the book is perhaps where for many people the wheels come off and he descends into a well-meaning rant. He has a go at alternative therapies, pseudo science, the supernatural, alternative medicine, faith healing, psychics and downright charlatans (and quite rightly, I think). He describes cold reading and gives some examples of where it might be used to make people believe an individual has “psychic” powers.
To finish off, there’s a selection of the more unusual emails he’s received over the years, including several from people who perhaps aught not to be let out unsupervised.
So, an interesting if wide-ranging read that sums up the man nicely. Since he lost his faith and started to look at the idea of belief as reality as an outsider, he’s managed to change the landscape of mentalism by thinking rationally, not subjectively about what makes us human. It shows in this very interesting, accessible, and above all, useful read.
