Big Secrets

by William Poundstone

Paperback, 1985

Status

Available

Call number

HD38 .P68

Publication

William Morrow Paperbacks (1985), Edition: Reprint Edition, 232 pages

Description

The Book That Gives the Inside Story on Hundreds of Secrets of American Life --Big Secrets. Are there really secret backward messages in rock music, or is somebody nuts? We tested suspect tunes at a recording studio to find out. What goes on at Freemason initiations? Here's the whole story, including -- yes! -- the electric carpet. Colonel Sanders boasted that Kentucky Fried Chicken's eleven secret herbs and spices "stand on everybody's shelf." We got a sample of the seasoning mix and sent it to a food chemist for analysis. Feverish rumor has it that Walt Disney's body was frozen and now lies in a secret cryonic vault somewhere beneath the Pirates of the Caribbean exhibit at Disneyland. Read the certified stranger-than-fiction truth. Don't bother trying to figure out how Doug Henning, David Copperfield, and Harry Blackstone, Jr., perform their illusions. Big Secrets has complete explanations and diagrams, nothing left to the imagination.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member MrJack
Big Secrets (1983), Bigger Secrets (1989), and Biggest Secrets (1994) are a trilogy of books written by William Poundstone. The tagline for the series is "the uncensored truth about all sorts of stuff you are never supposed to know."

I purchased the book of Big Secrets primarily for the contents of
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Part Five, Chapters 19-23, about magic and psychics.

• Chapter 19. David Copperfield's Dancing Handkerchief in a Bottle
• Chapter 20. Harry Blackstone, Jr.'s Sawing a Woman in Two
• Chapter 21. Uri Geller's Blindfold Drive
• Chapter 22. Doug Henning's Vanishing Horse and Rider
• Chapter 23. The Amazing Kreskin's Social Security Number

I have a love-hate relationship with books like Poundstone's. As an amateur magician, I love to be in the know about magic tricks and illusions, especially the closely guarded ones as performed by such celebrities as Copperfield, Blackstone, Jr., Geller, Henning, and Kreskin. On the other hand, I hate it when someone writes an exposé of magic tricks or illusions for the general public, thus ruining their effect for everyone else.

If you are not a magician or an aspiring magician, please do not read Chapters 19-23 in this book. Doing so will destroy the entertainment value of these tricks forever after.

On the other hand, as soon as you think you know how a magician ticks, he tocks. There are more elusive methods for performing some of these effects than Poundstone reveals.
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LibraryThing member ennie
Various secrets are revealed - like what Roschach blots are supposed to mean, the formula for KFC, hidden song lyrics, and was Walt Disney really frozen? This 1983 book seems a bit dated.
LibraryThing member datrappert
This book does a better than expected job of delivering on its promise to let you in on some big secrets, such as secret ingredients of Coke and so on. Fun to read.
LibraryThing member wishanem
In these days of the internet, few secrets are still very secret, but this collection of obscure knowledge was still pretty interesting. My favorite parts were the detailed investigations into questions without clear answers, specifically the historical recipes for things like Coca-Cola and
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perfumes. The funniest bit was the revelation that chemical analysis revealed that rather than 11 secret herbs and spices KFC fried chicken was spiced with salt, pepper, and no measurable quantities of any other spices.
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Subjects

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1983

Physical description

232 p.; 9.25 inches

ISBN

0688048307 / 9780688048303
Page: 0.1953 seconds