Site hosted by Angelfire.com: Build your free website today!
Anneman Card Miracles and Mental Mysteries
Hull, Burling Vulta
Stage Magic (1944)
In Collection
#4304
10*
Conjuring
Card tricks
Hardcover 
USA  eng
Hull, Burling: Annemann Card Miracles and Mental Mysteries
©1944 L. Davenport & Co., London
©1944 Stage Magic
Softcover, 38 pages
Also in hardcover

Comments: The softcover edition title says, "Two Complete Books in One, Mental Mysteries and Card Mysteries", but the inside page says "Anneman's Card Miracles and Annemann's Mental Mysteries". See also the entries under "Annemann" for the individual books.

Contents:

1 The Premier Book Test
4 The Mentalist's Card Staggerer
8 The Psychic Writing
14 Instantaneous Card Memory
17 Phantasma - A Mental Card Feat

23 Advertisement: for Sh-h-h--! It's A Secret

25 Part II Annemann's Mental Mysteries: (As printed in the copy I saw; actually this section is Annemann's Card Miracles)
26 Editor's Introduction
28 The Five Card Stabbing Mystery
31 The Eye-Popper Card Feat
33 Poker Player's Dream
35 The You Spell It Yourself Feat
38 A Day Time Nightmare

39 Advertisement
Product Details
No. of Pages 40
Personal Details
Read It No
Location Magic Library (Home) Shelf N
Condition Fine
Owner Bryan-Keith Taylor
Notes
Burling "Volta" Hull was an expert manipulator, mentalist, escape artist, illusionist, night-club performer, TV pioneer, and master marketer.

Burling Hull (September 9 1889 - November 1982) (alias "Volta, "Volta the Great", and "The White Wizard" ) was an inventive magician, self-styled "the Edison of magic," specializing in mentalist and psychic effects. During the greater part of his life he lived in DeLand, Florida.

In his earlier years he performed a skillful manipulation act, making billiard balls and silks vanish, multiply and reappear, while dressed entirely in white. [1]

Hull claimed to be -- and is generally credited as -- the inventor of the Svengali deck of cards, which he patented in 1909. He was a prolific writer, with 52 published books to his name. He wrote on a wide variety of magical subjects, including card tricks, mentalism, escapes, razor blade swallowing, sightless vision, billiard ball manipulation, silk magic, publicity and showmanship. His 33 Rope Ties and Chain Releases, written in 1915, is still popular today.

A shrewd businessman and marketer, Hull not only produced many titles about magical effects, he gave talks to magic conventions on business methods for entertainers. He was active in the movement to protect magic trade secrets by both patent on the gimmicks and copyright on the texts, as applicable, but he undercut his own ethical stance against plagiarism by publishing secret material from other magicians who had stolen from him, in order to get revenge for having been plagiarized.

Hull's weighty three-volume Encyclopedic Dictionary of Mentalism, published in 1961, was the largest compilation of mentalism sleights, gimmicks, effects, patter, and illusions in one collection up to that date. This work was also notable as the venue in which Hull carried out his excoriating feud with the equally famous mentalist Robert A. Nelson, whom he accused in print of teaching mentalism to gamblers and racketeers in order that they might commit what Hull called "thievery of the public", and whom he criticised for selling hoodoo folk magic curios that Hull said were used in rituals of "black magic and Devil worship". [2]

In the late 1950s he published a sort of newsletter called The G_d D__n Truth About Magic, mainly for the purpose of criticizing Nelson and supposedly written by one Gideon ("Gid") Dayn, but it didn't take much imagination to know what the first words actually stood for. [1]

In his final years he lost his eyesight, a loss he never learned to accept, and he died at the age of 93 in a nursing home. [1]





References
1. a b c Francis Marshall in the introduction to a reprint of The G_d D__n Truth About Magic.
2. Hull, Burling. Encyclopedic Dictionary of Mentalism. 1961.