The Book
”Sleight of Mind – Suggestion and Mind Control: The Mentalist’s Toolkit”
2nd Edition (2005)
Ian Harding and Martin Nyrup
ISBN 87-990481-0-8
Cost
£34.95 (
www.magicshop.co.uk)
Difficulty
This book is not an easy short cut for the teenage mind control wannabe. Rather, it is a training manual for the serious student of mentalism.
Review
If you’ve ever wondered why some patter goes down better, why you seem to get more cooperation out of some spectators, and why you get more astonishment out of some audiences, you might be interested in this book. It forms a concise guide to the principles underlying neuro-linguistic programming as it applies to Mentalism.
Opening my copy, and I bought this book rather than simply asking the publisher for a review copy, I found two scribbled signatures, both in blue but decidedly different biro ink. Could this be a signed copy? If either author is reading this, I’d be interested to know.
The book starts with the basics, such as gaining rapport and reading how a person thinks about reality. It moves on to discuss how to read the signals a subject might give you unconsciously that indicate various emotional states.
It then moves on to a tutorial on how to create and fire anchors (creating and pushing buttons). A great example here is how to anchor the amazement at the first effect and use it to augment the amazement felt at the second, and so on. Anchors really are amazing things, and the book references people like Brown and Banachek as users.
Making a subject feel relaxed quickly not only makes them respond better to an effect but makes them more open to suggestion, and so a discussion about chakras and relaxation points follows. This is not something you find in many books on mentalism and is a testament to this title’s depth of knowledge.
But then we’re into the main course: suggestions, and how to implant them. Here laid out are various ingenious techniques for imparting thoughts to a willing subject along with sections on hypnotic induction, the handling of subjects and advanced methods of presenting suggestions.
Finally, there’s a short section on NLP in real life, and even a final warning: Even those skilled in such subtleties are susceptible.
Overall
There's a lot of hype surrounding NLP at the moment, but seeing it done peoperly is astonishing. You must read this book all the way through and understand it to get the most from it, but if you do, you could create supernatural powers, start an old-style religion, a cult or even an evil empire. You could certainly create a better mentalism act!
Those learning to use NLP in their acts will find both instructions and working examples. Already knowing the techniques involved, I was interested in the uses this book has found for them. Considering some NLP courses charge £100s for information not even directly applicable to Mentalism, £34.99 sounds like a reasonable price to me.
Believe me, you’ll never watch a commercial break in the same way again after reading this book…