Witchcraft and Magic, Entertainment Biography, Asia - Travel, Games, Hinduism, Alternative Spirituality, Asia - Travel Essays & Descriptions
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Overview
"Sorcerer's Apprentice is the amazing story of Tahir Shah's apprenticeship to one of India's master conjurors, Hakim Feroze, and his initiation into the brotherhood of Indian godmen. It is also the account of a magical journey across India, told with self-deprecating wit, panache, and an eye for the outlandish." "Feroze is the kind of person who can seemingly walk through locked doors, dematerialize when your gaze is averted, and resurrect himself from the dead. A student of Houdini and a hard taskmaster, he teaches the author the basics of his craft, such as sleights of hand, swallowing stones, raising his body temperature to 104 degrees, immersing his hands in boiling oil and lead, and - Aaron's old trick from the Bible - turning a rod into a serpent. Shah learns not only to practice illusion but to spot the artifice behind it. To complete his training and prove himself, he is sent on a quest to discover the ways illusion is manifest in every corner of the subcontinent." "Saddled with a hilarious sidekick and guide he calls the Trickster, Shah travels from Calcutta to Madras, from Bangalore to Bombay in search of the miraculous and bizarre. Encountering myriad incarnations of illusion, deception, and street fraud, he meets a mix of sadhus, sages, sorcerers, avatars, fortune-tellers, healers, hypnotists, and humbugs, among them people who have developed extraordinary talents and abilities. While recounting their feats, he also reveals - and admires - the imagination and resourcefulness ordinary Indians deploy in order to survive. In this book, Tahir Shah lifts the veil on the East's most puzzling miracles and exposes a side of India that most never imagine exists."--BOOK JACKET.Author's travel accounts in India.
Editorials
Kirkus Reviews
A Briton of Afghan descent reveals his quest for the secret of India's greatest conjurers—a journey that takes him through several subcontinental cities and provides a humorous anthropological study of the world of Indian con artists. Hoping to find Jan, the Indian illusionist who initiated Shah into the world of conjuring as a child, the author starts out in Delhi at Hotel Bliss, a partially submerged dwelling where "the rats that survived the flood could be heard nibbling on the cockroaches in the dank corridor outside my room." He soon finds Jan, but the magician refuses to teach him and advises him to seek Feroze, the renowned conjurer of Calcutta. The wild goose chase continues on the Farakka Express, a train infamous for harboring its "own breed of brigand," groups of tricksters who, disguised as shoe cleaners and passengers, maintain a cooperative swindling system. Shah detours into holy Varansi (where the abolition of sati leaves castigated widows praying for death) and on to Calcutta's streets—where he learns why mothers rent babies to beggars. Poetic descriptions of these ghastly sights and fiendish foes are spiced with a unique, dark humor. After enduring several hardships—including bedbugs, robbery, and the fetid Ganges—Shah finds Feroze and is granted apprenticeship at the magician's mansion. But Feroze proves to be a tyrannical master and his sadistic training regimen soon has the obedient apprentice thirsting for revenge. As Shah cleverly psychoanalyzes Feroze, he renders a hilarious skit of an underling on the verge of rebellion. Feroze is so intriguing that the narration loses momentum once he orders Shah to go on a solo journey to encounter more"godmen." Still, Shah's colorful, lively portraits give each character depth. A rich, exciting read for the armchair Indiana Jones who longs to learn the secrets of Houdini.Book Details
Published
May 8, 2002
Publisher
Arcade Publishing
Pages
323
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781559706261