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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Save your money, September 26, 2001
By A Customer
I ended up returning this book.I was looking for a book that could show me the details on building some interesting non-professional haunted house effects for my yard this year. This book is not it. The low production values, clumbsy writing, and weak artwork could be endured if the content was good, but unfortunately, it was not. Make no mistake - this is not a 'how-to' book. Much of the book looks like the author likes to draw scary pictures on half a page, and describe the drawing underneath. Only the simplest of illusions are detailed. Anything ambitious is glossed over - if you're lucky, you get text to the effect of "If you want to do this, find someone who knows how to do it." Not very helpful if you're trying to learn. The text reads as if it were written by teenagers in one draft. It jumps from "don't blame us if you get someone hurt" to "don't blame us if your guests don't suffer heart attacks and die from fright!" (I'm paraphrasing.) The author even suggests mocking peoples' beliefs by making a "freak show" exhibit out of them - meant to be a joke, hopefully, but it just comes off as being insensitive and sad. Finally, there is very little in the way of practical information. A few illusions have simple diagrams, but I would have liked more: how to actually build some of these illusions, how much I could expect them to cost, what I need to buy to make them, how long it might take to assemble them, how to stage and light them, and most importantly, how to ensure they are safe. The sad part is that you can tell the author really loves this stuff, but just doesn't have the depth of knowledge to justify writing a book. It feels like he just brainstormed a bunch of spooky scenes, described the few illusions he could figure out, dropped in some trolled bits from the Halloween-L mailing list, and called it a book. Overall, an amateurish and unhelpful work.
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