Henry Hay (writer)

Henry Hay was the pen name of June Barrows Mussey (March 30, 1910 – July 27, 1985), a journalist and translator who is notable for his writing about magic and sleight of hand and also of a large number of European authors including Lion Feuchtwanger.

Henry Hay
Born
June Barrows

March 30, 1910
DiedJuly 27, 1985
NationalityAmerican
OccupationJournalist and translator
Known forWriting about magic and sleight of hand

He also was one of the anonymous translators of Hitler's Mein Kampf (1925–26) for an American edition by the publisher Stackpole Sons.[1] Stackpole advertised that it paid "no royalties to Hitler" and later played up the fact that the publisher was donating a percentage of the proceeds to refugee relief. 12,000 copies were printed but Stackpole had to stop selling because of a legal battle with the publisher Houghton, Mifflin who had bought the American rights.[2]

Mussey was born in New York and lived in West Germany after World War II. He was a friend of the famous coin manipulator Thomas Nelson Downs. His highly regarded The Amateur Magician's Handbook (1950) has gone through several editions and is still considered a standard reference work among magicians.

Publications

gollark: 2012 would be... Sandy Bridge or so, so newer CPUs will basically just be more cores and slightly higher single-thread performance.
gollark: You can get both pretty easily if you just get a somewhat better GPU than you would for a productivity-only setup.
gollark: And I say "well" kind of loosely.
gollark: It runs surprisingly well on my laptop (i5 7200U/HD Graphics 620), though that's possibly just because of the low-res screen.
gollark: My lowish-solar-orbit communications satellite is finally in lowish solar orbit after far too much time spent waiting on the ion engine.

References

  1. Worthington, Jay. "Mein Royalties: Who Profits from Hitler's Bestseller?" Cabinet 10 (2003). http://www.cabinetmagazine.org/issues/10/mein_royalties.php. Range, Bryant, and Maierhofer 73-74.
  2. Barns, J. J., Barns, P. P. (2008). Hitler's "Mein Kampf" in Britain and America: A Publishing History 1930–39. Cambridge University Press.

Further reading

  • Regina Range, Mary Bryant, and Waltraud Maierhofer, "J. Barrows Mussey and his Translation of Feuchtwanger's Wahn oder Der Teufel in Boston," Feuchtwanger and Remigration. Edited by Ian Wallace. (Feuchtwanger Studies 3.) Peter Lang, 2013. 67-81. ISBN 978-3-0343-0919-6.
  • http://www.geniimagazine.com/wiki/index.php/Henry_Hay
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