Linking Rings: William W. Durbin and the Magic and Mystery of AmericaKent State University Press, 2004 - 315 pages "So how to tell of the life of a magician whose vocation was politics? A simple biography was out of the question. All of the hard research led to an idea. Why not travel back in time for one night to meet the old wizard himself in a car ride that actually did take place at the end of his life? Once there, he could tell his story directly to one of his descendants--a transference of family memories that just may have had national significance. Surely a magician could accomplish such a meeting." --from the Preface David Copperfield had this to say about Linking Rings. William W. Durbin, businessman, political activist, and professional magician, was a major figure in Ohio politics during the first half of the twentieth century, serving as the powerful head of the Ohio Democratic Party and as a senior official in the U.S. Treasury under Franklin D. Roosevelt. Durbin's story is that of a political maverick who knew how to manipulate behind-the-scenes activities, especially in Ohio's political arena. He was instrumental in William Jennings Bryan's near-defeat of William McKinley in Ohio, and two decades later he helped Woodrow Wilson reach the White House. Although Durbin's vocation was politics, his passion was magic. One of the nation's premier magicians, who performed on stage as "The Past Master of the Black Art," he was the first elected president of the International Brotherhood of Magicians, a professional organization that has grown since its first convention in Kenton, Ohio, in 1926 to number more than 15,000 members today. Imaginatively told and thoroughly researched, Linking Rings is an engaging biography narrated by James D. Robenalt, Durbin's great-grandson, who places himself with Durbin in a long car ride back to Ohio from Washington, D.C., in February 1937. Fans of magic and those interested in political history will find Linking Rings an engrossing read. |
From inside the book
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... Kellar was hired as an advance agent but soon found the brothers intolerable . " You will do as I tell you , " one of them said to Kellar , “ and you might as well know you are my servant . " Kellar quit and began his own show with ...
... Kellar , which were writ- ten in " a mighty fine hand " and in which he “ used many expressions that only a fellow like Kellar would . " Although I saw a similar collection of let- ters between Harry Houdini and Kellar in David ...
... Kellar . Kellar died a few years later . Durbin told reporters when he became the register of the Treasury that Kellar had once asked him to become his successor.21 " The chances are that but few of Mr. Durbin's associates here in ...
Contents
And Things Are Not What They Seem | 1 |
Tim Kelly Will Not Soon Be Forgotten | 18 |
The Doctor | 35 |
Copyright | |
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