Edwin A. Dawes (1925–2023)
Author of Great Illusionists
About the Author
Disambiguation Notice:
Really one and the same author writing on both Biochemistry (his profession) and on Stage Magic (his private passion).
Series
Works by Edwin A. Dawes
The Rich Cabinet Collection, Vol. 1 8 copies
Circle Without End 1 copy
The book of Magic 1 copy
Harry Leat 1 copy
Glimpses of Goldston 1 copy
The Magic of Britain 1 copy
Henry Dean 1 copy
Isaac Fawkes 1 copy
Doctor Ormonde 1 copy
Willane 1 copy
Glimpses of Goldston 1 copy
"Out of the Rich Cabinet" 1 copy
Isaac Fawkes Fame and Fable 1 copy
Vonetta Mistress of Mystery 1 copy
The Magic of Britain 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Dawes, Edwin Alfred
- Birthdate
- 1925-07-06
- Date of death
- 2023-03-03
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Google Grammar School
University of Leeds (BS, PhD) - Occupations
- biochemist
magician
historian of magic
journal editor - Organizations
- University of Glasgow
Federation of European Microbiological Societies (publications manager; archivist)
University of Hull
Philip Larkin Society (founding chair)
Hull Magicians' Circle
The Magic Circle (official historian) (show all 8)
Scottish Association of Magicians
The Scottish Conjurers' Association - Awards and honors
- The John Nevil Maskelyne Prize (2010)
- Nationality
- UK
- Birthplace
- Goole, Yorkshire, England, UK
- Disambiguation notice
- Really one and the same author writing on both Biochemistry (his profession) and on Stage Magic (his private passion).
- Associated Place (for map)
- England, UK
Members
Reviews
This is a magic book for beginners. It is long on description but short on explanation. That's okay. As John Salisse, Honorary Vice-president of The Magic Circle says in the Foreword, "It is not how a trick is carried out which is important, but how it is presented."
This is an oversized book for display on the coffee table, not for shelving out-of-sight. Your guests, young and old, will be entertained simply by leafing through the pages of this lavishly illustrated volume. Within the pages show more of this book you will discover magic for the junior magician as well as for the master magician.
My favorite trick in the book, Woolly Wizardry, is simple in explanation but bewildering in demonstration. A borrowed coin is marked, wrapped into a piece of paper, and attached to a spring clip suspended from a wire hook held by a spectator. The coin is caused to travel from the packet to a paper bag (stapled shut) located some distance away. The packet is torn to pieces, revealing that the coin is gone. When the paper bag is torn open, there is a ball of wool inside. It is dropped into a large drinking glass. Taking one end of the yarn, the ball is unwound. A clinking sound is heard and the coin falls into the bottom of the glass. The spectator removes the coin, checks the mark, and acknowledges that it is his mark and his coin. Applause, please!
A general index perused by entries in regular typeface (descriptions) and bold typeface (illustrations) will point you to famous magicians, past and present, from The Great Carmo on page 1 to Dante on pages 184-5. Italicized entries will lead you to famous books about magic from Reginald Scot's The Discoverie of Witchcraft (1584) to Paul Daniels' Magic Book (1980). There is a separate index of magic tricks and techniques where readers are guided to sections of the book where they can learn how magical effects are prepared and performed. Incidentally, don't look for "Houdini" in the index. Although there are more references to Houdini than to any other magician in this book, he is cited by his real name, Ehrich Weiss.
About the Authors. Edwin A. Dawes is a magic historian, collector, lecturer, and writer. He is an Honorary Vice-President of The Inner Magic Circle, London. He has won prestigious awards from the Academy of Magical Arts, Hollywood, an organization headquartered at the Magic Palace that is devoted to the promotion and development of the art of magic, and from the Society of American Magicians, the oldest fraternal magic organization in the world. Arthur Setterington is a performer and writer, a member of The Inner Magic Circle, London, and an award winner from the world's largest organization for professional and amateur magicians, the International Brotherhood of Magicians. show less
This is an oversized book for display on the coffee table, not for shelving out-of-sight. Your guests, young and old, will be entertained simply by leafing through the pages of this lavishly illustrated volume. Within the pages show more of this book you will discover magic for the junior magician as well as for the master magician.
My favorite trick in the book, Woolly Wizardry, is simple in explanation but bewildering in demonstration. A borrowed coin is marked, wrapped into a piece of paper, and attached to a spring clip suspended from a wire hook held by a spectator. The coin is caused to travel from the packet to a paper bag (stapled shut) located some distance away. The packet is torn to pieces, revealing that the coin is gone. When the paper bag is torn open, there is a ball of wool inside. It is dropped into a large drinking glass. Taking one end of the yarn, the ball is unwound. A clinking sound is heard and the coin falls into the bottom of the glass. The spectator removes the coin, checks the mark, and acknowledges that it is his mark and his coin. Applause, please!
A general index perused by entries in regular typeface (descriptions) and bold typeface (illustrations) will point you to famous magicians, past and present, from The Great Carmo on page 1 to Dante on pages 184-5. Italicized entries will lead you to famous books about magic from Reginald Scot's The Discoverie of Witchcraft (1584) to Paul Daniels' Magic Book (1980). There is a separate index of magic tricks and techniques where readers are guided to sections of the book where they can learn how magical effects are prepared and performed. Incidentally, don't look for "Houdini" in the index. Although there are more references to Houdini than to any other magician in this book, he is cited by his real name, Ehrich Weiss.
About the Authors. Edwin A. Dawes is a magic historian, collector, lecturer, and writer. He is an Honorary Vice-President of The Inner Magic Circle, London. He has won prestigious awards from the Academy of Magical Arts, Hollywood, an organization headquartered at the Magic Palace that is devoted to the promotion and development of the art of magic, and from the Society of American Magicians, the oldest fraternal magic organization in the world. Arthur Setterington is a performer and writer, a member of The Inner Magic Circle, London, and an award winner from the world's largest organization for professional and amateur magicians, the International Brotherhood of Magicians. show less
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 42
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 224
- Popularity
- #100,171
- Rating
- 5.0
- Reviews
- 1
- ISBNs
- 25











