Uncle Don is funny at the best of
times, but on this occasion, we were on holiday with a mixed crowd of my family
and Uni friends when he announced after dinner that he could read minds. Of
course, we had to see this!
Onto the coffee table in the centre
of the room he placed three upside down egg cups. Next, he produced a small
coin from his pocket and asked for a volunteer. My friend Claire was only too
willing.
Her job? To hide the coin under one
of the egg cups while Uncle Don was out the room. His job? To re-enter the room
and ‘read her mind’ before lifting the correct egg cup to reveal the hidden
coin. Our job? To watch and be amazed when he got it right.
Except he didn’t. Not once.
He tried magic words, weird facial expressions, head scratching ... He tried reading Claire’s aura. He tried reading the minds of everyone else in the room (we’d all seen where she’d hidden it after all). He even tried having different people hide the coin — because maybe Claire had magical anti-mind-reading powers he’d not encountered before … The longer it went on, the more determined Uncle Don became, and the harder we all laughed.
It wasn’t until later, that Uncle Don told us what had happened. The trick required a stooge who knew the secret signalling system. Uncle Don was convinced my brother Mungo knew it. If he had, we’d all have been completely amazed and bamboozled by the trick. But like the rest of us, Mungo had never seen the trick before.
While Don didn’t manage to
demonstrate his prowess as a mind-reader that evening, he did demonstrate
something else: stage presence. Uncle Don had that in spades. In fact, that was
all he needed to entertain us.
In my new book, Marlow Brown:Magician in the Making, Marlow loves magic. She also has stage presence. It’s not until the end, however, that she fully appreciates the value of this. She’s a learner magician and things go wrong—of course. They do for all learner magicians as I discovered in my research interview with two practising illusionists. I loved hearing their tales of failed magic! And I’m pretty sure they loved reminiscing. In fact, some of their stories made their way into the book.
For Marlow though, getting it right
is what matters most. So, when Dad is amused by a failed card trick, her
shambolic escape from a straitjacket, and the upside-down wine glass trick
disaster, Marlow just wants him to stop laughing. If she’s going to become a
top-class magician she needs to be taken seriously. It takes a seemingly
unrecoverable hypnotism disaster at the class talent show — and the fall out of
that — to finally change Marlow’s mind. Yes, skill and prowess are both
important. But so too is making her audience laugh. And this she’s done, right
the way through.
I hope that readers will find Marlow Brown and her escapades entertaining, but will also take from it that gritty perseverance Marlow has, in trying again and again after each failure. Because, what really matters, is not so much your success, but how much fun you and your audience are having, as you attempt to master something new.
Kesta Fleming is a children’s author and poet. Her latest book, Marlow Brown: Magician in the Making, is the second in the Marlow Brown series with illustrations by Marjory Gardner. It’s available online from the publisher, Celapene Press. For more information, contact Kesta by email kesta@kestafleming.com.
Discover more about Kesta and what her features in her 'to read' piles through her Look What I'm Reading post.