by Sexton Blake » Dec 31st, '07, 18:25
I'm late to this. Sorry: I overslept. Anyway, I ground my teeth when I knew these sections were coming out, and ground them again when I saw the heading which was essentially 'Secrets! Revealed!' - that's to say, no suggestion of teaching the reader the trick, because they might want to learn it, but simple, gratuitous exposure.
However, I punished my teeth needlessly, I reckon.
First, the tricks:
No one not genuinely interested in magic would have read more than a couple of them. Honestly, the prose was absolutely punishing; plus telling you where to place cards/fingers/whatever, though vital, is just innately dull. I'm very much against exposure, and not of the school that believes an audience will enjoy a trick when they know how it's done, if it's done well. (A bad magician can make a fab trick tedious and vapid while a great one will make a tiny one marvellous, but the audience still needs not to know the secret: otherwise it's not magic, it's just some person talking/moving about, there's no mystery or awe or surprise.) But, seriously, the wounding misery of the text means being alarmed by these Graun pieces would be like a bunch of programmers fearing for their jobs because C++ books are openly on sale in WH Smith's. OK, I was irked by some of the box outs - 'Key Cards', for example; which the author mentioned, he said, in the belief that 'everyone knows about them already' (which I know isn't true, and, if it were, would merely make explaining them redundant anyway, yes?) - but otherwise I exhaled with relief.
Next, the 'exposures'. Here, I can only suspect the author of displaying honour. It's been mentioned that Card on Ceiling was exposed, but it wasn't really. It just said how the card stuck to the ceiling. Well, if you asked *anyone* who'd seen CoC, I'm sure they'd tell you they assumed the card had some sticky stuff on it - but that's a piffling detail. They want to know how *their* card (possibly when it was inside the pack, inside the case) became stuck to the ceiling. And take the explanation of the Rising Card - a special pack that contains a weighted pulley system. It's more exposing how magicians might have done it fifty years ago than any of the ways they'll be doing it now.
Overall, I thought it was nothing to get worked up over. In fact, more likely to make magic look less sad - by giving it the leg up of being a two-day promotion in a national broadsheet - than ruin the tricks of anyone with more than a passing interest in the art.
Oh, I have, by the way, no association whatsoever with the journo who wrote/conceived the pieces.