Fakers, Forgers & Phoneys: Famous Scams and Scamps

Fakers, Forgers & Phoneys: Famous Scams and Scamps

by Magnus Magnusson KBE (Author)

Synopsis

In "Fakers, Forgers and Phoneys", Magnus Magnusson masterfully explores the shadowy world of deception and counter-feiting. Through the 16 case studies in this intriguing collection, the author reveals: how a house-painter-cum-art-restorer fooled the art world and became a national TV celebrity in 1979; the identity of the person who fabricated the 'missing link' human skull which was discovered in a gravel pit at Piltdown in Essex in 1912; how a mystery man known by the unlikely name of George Psalmanazar fooled the London literary world in 1704 with his lurid accounts of cannibalism and polygamy in his native island of Formosa (Taiwan); how an obese cockney adventurer resident in Australia succeeded in passing himself off as a slim young English aristocrat who had disappeared more than ten years earlier in 1854 ('The Tichborne Claimant'); and how a suave London conman inveigled a struggling artist to become involved in the greatest British art scam of the twentieth century. "Fakers, Forgers and Phoneys" is the essential guide to the most ingenious art and literary forgeries, archaeological frauds, and imposters and hoaxers in the world.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 416
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Mainstream
Published: 05 Oct 2006

ISBN 10: 1845961900
ISBN 13: 9781845961909
Book Overview: The essential guide to the most ingenious art and literary forgeries, archaeological frauds, imposters and hoaxers in the world.

Media Reviews
A brisk, fascinating and delightful volume Scotland on Sunday Intriguing (Critic's Choice) Daily Mail An excellent read Ripperologist
Author Bio
Magnus Magnusson KBE was born in Reykjavik in 1929 and came with his family to Edinburgh at the age of nine months. He has had a distinguished career in broadcasting, journalism, historical and archaeological research, Icelandic and Old Norse studies, and environmental affairs. He married his wife, Mamie Baird, in 1954, and they have four children and nine grandchildren.