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Ben Robinson is a product of
my imagination. I made him up. He's a character in a book I wrote.
Anyone who tells you differently is wrong. It started twenty years ago, when I picked up Milbourne Christopher's
Illustrated History of Magic for the first time. I was
13 years old, and did much of my reading under the covers, by
flashlight. Though by that time I had worked my way through most
of the Tarbell's, Christopher's book was the first magic history
I'd ever read. This was great stuff - Robert-Houdin and the rebellion
in Algeria, Houdini and the Siberian Prison Van - I was hooked.
But the story that really jumped out at me, and has stayed with
me ever since, was the account of Chung Ling Soo and the ill-fated
bullet-catch. I often pictured the scene: the tall figure of
the magician in his silk robe, the sharpshooters taking careful
aim, the sudden crack of the rifles, the collective gasp as the
performer sank to the stage... Some years later, as I was casting about for a plot for my
book Elephants in the Distance, I realized I need look
no further than the story of Chung Ling Soo. The bullet-catch
gave me a starting point, and to bring the story up to date I
created an affable young magician named Paul Galliard. He was
a New Yorker, worked a gig at a West End Bar, had a girlfriend
in T.V. news, and - oh, yeah - he caught bullets in his teeth. The book came out in 1989. It got some nice reviews, sold
well, but failed to make me a millionaire, so I busily set to
work on the next one. One day, the phone rang. A voice said,
"Hi Dan, this is Ben Robinson." By this time I'd heard the name. A friend had recommended
his book Twelve Have Died, as the definitive statement
on the history of the bullet catch. This proved to be the case,
but - to my chagrin - I discovered it too late to do me any good.
I knew nothing else about the author, and frankly, the meager
information I'd been able to glean from the book itself did not
augur well. They say you can tell a lot about a writer by how
he chooses to present himself in his jacket photo. Me, I like
to strike a thoughtful pose, often in front of a book case, gazing
into the middle distance. Apparently Ben Robinson took a different
view. In his photo, there's a twelve-inch metal skewer sticking
through his tongue. I was somewhat wary, then, when the guy called me up out of
the blue. He came right to the point: "Have you been following
me around?"
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