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Secrets of the Sideshows

[ePub] Secrets of the Sideshows by Joe Nickell in Arts-Photography

Description

ldquo;Il ragazzo della via Gluckrdquo; la canzone a cui allude il titolo di questrsquo;opera. Lrsquo;ideale aggiornato prosieguo del testo di Celentano. La fine del mondo per come oggi lo conosciamo; la societagrave; dei consumi e dello sfruttamento; a favorire un Nuovo Uomo; migliore. Per rinascere; prima questo mondo deve morire. I protagonisti dei senza casa; con seacute; solo lrsquo;orgoglio della strada. Succede che una casa lrsquo;acquisiscano. Entrati nella casa; il proprio roblema risolto? E chissenefrega ora del resto del mondo? Per quanto tu stia bene; stai bene; ma sei nel mondo che sta male. Il problema delle chiavi di casa; il rinchiudersi in essa; lasciando fuori il mondo? La vita egrave; sui marciapiedi; non nelle case. Bisogna battere i marciapiedi della vita; alla vita partecipando. La Magia del Fare a fare qualcosa davvero; di vero Fare. Copertina di Milena Vignali. I diritti drsquo;autore a ldquo;Associazione per la casardquo; (area di Radio Sherwood di Padova).


#472098 in eBooks 2005-09-09 2005-09-09File Name: B0078XFSJA


Review
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful. A walk down the MidwayBy Andy WoodJoe Nickells latest book. Secrets of the Sideshow is a thoroughly researched tome that is worth the cover price for the pictures alone.The cover effectively uses a banner art style with Frog Boy charmingly gracing the spine. The title is a little misleading. it is not a revelatory guide or masked magician type of book at all. More of a scholarly attempt to document a lost part of American theatre. Mr. Nickells previous works were largely concerned with his role as editor of the Skeptical Enquirer. So deal with the Shroud of Turin. Bigfoot etc. Not having read any of those I cannot comment. but suffice to say that this history of bringing a scientific mind to apparent miracles may have impacted the choice of title. What is apparent is that he has a real love of this subject. He has worked the midway at various fairs as a magician and obviously the carnival world got into his blood. Relying heavily on interviews with carnival legends Ward Hall. Chris Christ and Bobby Reynolds the author details the history of this unique piece of Americana. Bobby Reynolds contributions are fairly ascerbic with a certain bitterness when compared to Ward Halls more agreeable approach. No attempt appears to have been made to edit any of these contributions. There are copious references to other works. Ricky Jay. Daniel Mannix and Al Stencell are quoted liberally and these authors works would make excellent companion reads.As one goes through the book the reader does learn how effects are achieved. the use of gaffs. fakery and general deception are discussed. However. this remains a secondary facet of this work. It is much more of a historical encyclopedia and includes a thorough list of references and detailed index. Overshadowing the mechanical How To aspects of the book are the wonderful characters that one meets within its pages. Poobah the fire eating dwarf. Percilla the monkey girl. Doug Higley phantom of the midway and purveyor of Area 51 artifacts. [Of course they are real]. And numerous other fascinating people who often show more grace and dignity than the so called normal specimens of the human family.The writing style is a mixture of academic investigation and whimsical fan. Despite his natural instincts for scientific rigor the authors joy in the subject and obvious sadness at the demise of the sideshow shine through.It ends on a positive and up to date note with a piece on the sideshow school at Coney Island. one of the last bastions of the traditional arts.I reccomend this book to anyone whoever thought about running away to the circus and I enjoyed reading it tremendously.PS. One small piece of pedantry. On page 214. Joe Nickell decribes the turn of the century magician Chung Ling Soo as an Englishman pretending to be a Chinaman. In his excellent biography of Chung Ling Soo. The Glorious Deception. Jim Steinmeyer details Soos life as an American who often pretended to be an Englishman. or more commonly a Scotsman pretending to be a Chinaman. Which goes to show that even a skeptical investigator can be confounded by a fellow conjurer. from beyond the grave to boot! My sense is that Mr. Nickell would be delighted.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Worth my timeBy nessa belphoebeWritten by someone who respects the sideshow past and present. Doesnt feel like he is focused on the "oh my God look at that poor person" aspect but on their lives. history and ability to turn what some would think of as a disability into a career. The background and history of the sideshow was very informative.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. A must have bookBy Sheldon AronowitzIf you love the sideshow (and what normal fun loving person does not?!! :-) then this is a MUST have book!!!Well researched.

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