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—J. W. Appel and G. W. Beebe (Professors of Psychiatry)

      It wasn’t just the war that made him what he was. That’s too easy. It was everything—his whole nature… But I can’t stress enough that he was always very well behaved, always thoughtful toward others, a nice boy. At the funeral he just couldn’t help it. I wanted to yell, too. Even now I’ll go out to my husband’s grave and stare at that stupid stone and yell Why, why, why!

       —Eleanor K. Wade

      You know, I think politics and magic were almost the same thing for him. Transformations—that’s part of it—trying to change things. When you think about it, magicians and politicians are basically control freaks. [Laughter] I should know, right?

       —Anthony L. (Tony) Carbo

       —Robert Parrish (The Magician’s Handbook)

       —Robert A. Caro (The Years of Lyndon Johnson)

       —Woodrow Wilson

      When his father died, John hardly even cried, but he seemed very, very angry. I can’t blame him. I was angry, too. I mean—you know—I kept asking myself, Why? It didn’t make sense. His father had problems with alcohol, that’s true, but there was something else beneath it, like this huge sadness I never understood. The sadness caused the drinking, not the other way around. I think that’s why his father ended up going into the garage that day … Anyway, John didn’t cry much. He threw a few tantrums, I remember that. Yelling and so on. At the funeral. Awfully loud yelling.

       —Eleanor K. Wade

       —Judith Herman (Trauma and Recovery)

      It wasn’t insomnia exactly. John could fall asleep at the drop of a hat, but then, bang, he’d wake up after ten or twenty minutes. He couldn’t stay asleep. It was as if he were on guard against something, tensed up, waiting for … well, I don’t know what.

       —Eleanor K. Wade

       —Woodrow Wilson

      Show me a politician, I’ll show you an unhappy childhood. Same for magicians.

       —Anthony L. (Tony) Carbo

       —Richard M. Nixon

      I remember Kathy telling me how he’d wake up screaming sometimes. Foul language, which I won’t repeat. In fact, I’d rather not say anything at all.

       —Patricia S. Hood

      For some reason Mr. Wade threw away that old iron teakettle. I fished it out of the trash myself. I mean, it was a perfectly good teakettle.

       —Ruth Rasmussen

      The fucker did something ugly.

       —Vincent R. (Vinny) Pearson

       —Arthur J. Lux (Sheriff, Lake of the Woods County)

       7

       The Nature of Marriage

      When he was a boy, John Wade’s hobby was magic. In the basement, where he practiced in front of a stand-up mirror, he made his mother’s silk scarves change color. He cut his father’s best tie with scissors and restored it whole. He placed a penny in the palm of his hand, made his hand into a fist, made the penny into a white mouse.

      This was not

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