
#365 (February 21, 1986)
#366 (March 7, 1986)
#367 (March 21, 1986)
#368 (April 11, 1986)

#339 (September 28, 1984)
#340 (October 12, 1984)
#341 (October 26, 1984)
#342 (November 23, 1984)

#313 (January 14, 1983)
#314 (January 28, 1983)
#315 (February 11, 1983)
#316 (February 25, 1983)

#287 (July 3, 1981)
#288 (July 17, 1981)
#289 (July 31, 1981)
#290 (August 14, 1981)

#261 (July 4, 1980)
#262 (July 18, 1980)
#263 (August 1, 1980)
#264 (August 15, 1980)

#235 (July 8, 1979)
#236 (July 20, 1979)
#237 (August 3, 1979)

#209 (July 7, 1978)
#210 (July 21, 1978)
#211 (August 4, 1978)
#212 (August 18, 1978)

#183 (July 8, 1977)
#184 (July 22, 1977)
#185 (August 5, 1977)
#186 (August 19, 1977)

#157 (July 9, 1976)
#158 (July 23, 1976)
#159 (August 6, 1976)
#160 (August 20, 1976)

#131 (July 11, 1975)
#132 (July 25, 1975)
#133 (August 8, 1975)
#134 (August 22, 1975)

#105 (July 12, 1974)
#106 (July 26, 1974)
#107 (August 9, 1974)
#108 (August 23, 1974)

#79 (July 13, 1973)
#80 (July 27, 1973)
#81 (August 10, 1973)
#82 (August 24, 1973)

#53 (July 14, 1972)
#54 (July 28, 1972)
#55 (August 11, 1972)
#56 (August 25, 1972)

#27 (July 16, 1971)
#28 (July 23, 1971)
#29 (August 13, 1971)
#30 (August 27, 1971)

This first volume includes the five forewords from the reprint volumes Collectors' Workshop published in 2009.
#1 (July 17, 1970)
#2 (July 31, 1970)
#3 (August 14, 1970)

Johnny Geddes was Britain's leading comedy magician. As a performer, he first worked with many top music hall artistes of the day and was always in constant demand. Billed as 'The Biggest Dope in Magic', he appeared in many television programmes and featured in his own TV series.
As an originator, numerous effects of his have been marketed by leading magic dealers, and over the years, he authored a number of first-class books on comedy magic as well as 2,000 published articles which appeared in most of the leading magic magazines.
Johnny was also a theatrical agent, booking acts for...

Jon Racherbaumer lectured around the globe. These are the lecture notes for a lecture he gave in Italy in 2008.
1st edition 2008, PDF 28 pages.

Includes a comprehensive description of the continuous front and back hand palm with cards, and the sensational new rising card trick.

This double sandwich is based on Dragnet by Jack Birnman. I added two moves that replace ATFUS with a better move. I would even say that it only works on this sandwich. It's just my imagination. I've never seen anyone do what I do. The last move is even better, and so I distribute the aces with the spectator's cards to be in certain places, so that they are different places not next to each other. And at the beginning, if you notice, I don't arrange the cards red-black-black-red, like in every version.
Inspired from Dragnet by Jack Birnman, Tengard by Paul Gordon, New jack...

Effect: After the spectator shuffles and cuts about 13 cards, he tries to guess the color of each card. The magician reveals how many cards were correctly guessed by the spectator, the identity of the bottom card of the red packet, and finally the bottom three cards of the other packet.
Do you have a marked deck that you don't use or are afraid to use? This effect is for you. It was constructed so that the spectator never suspects a marked deck. If you are asked to do a trick, this is a fun go-to effect you can do. There's no setup, no sleight of hand, and multiple reveals.

The fans of mental logs are in for a big treat here. X Ray Mental Logs takes the principle of mental logs in a completely novel and innovative direction, which is totally different from my earlier releases on this subject - Mental Logs Unlogged, Einstein's Color Psychology, Logsquare, Logsquare 2 and Invisible Mental Logs - each of which is a unique take on mental logs principle which elevates it from being a mathematical novelty to an unfathomable, impossible and hard hitting mystery.
Most magicians and mentalists are aware of...

Excerpt from the Foreword by John Northern Hilliard:
A Master of Magic tells of his wanderings through all the countries of the world and through some two score years of his life. And such a life! For Mr. Thurston has been no chartered tourist on the great swing around the circle, but a magnificent adventurer, a glamourous figure on the shining ways of Romance. How he has lived! And having lived— dreaming, working, mystifying, and ceaselessly wandering—this Ulysses of the Magic Wand tells his story as unselfconsciously as he lived it. And yet so compellingly that we humdrum...