Product Details
Spellbinder: The Life of Harry Houdini

Spellbinder: The Life of Harry Houdini
By Lalicki

This item is not available for purchase from this store.
Buy at Amazon


15 new or used available from CDN$ 0.13

Average customer review:
(1 )

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2127596 in Books
  • Published on: 2004-03-19
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 96 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
This highly readable biography about Harry Houdini (1874-1926), the famous magician and escape artist, casts a spell of its own. Through the well-researched and fast-paced narrative, Lalicki (Light Shining Through the Mist: A Photobiography of Dian Fossey) sifts through the many contradictions of Houdini's life to unveil the circumstances leading up to Houdini's stratospheric success. Born Ehrich Weiss in Budapest, the future magician immigrated with his family to the U.S. in 1878. By age 18, he had channeled his drive and a love of performing into magic, choosing the stage name Harry Houdini in homage to master magician Robert-Houdin. Lalicki effectively underscores the tandem guiding influences of Houdini's mother and his wife, Bess Rahner, who also acted as his assistant, in describing a career that spanned from 1892-1926. The author also puts Houdini's success into perspective at a time when people had little money and media coverage was scarce. He attributes Houdini's breakthrough, in large part, to his 1899 introduction to Martin Beck, who backed him and encouraged Houdini to drop the more banal magician's tricks in favor of innovative escapes, which he mastered through intense physical exertion and practice (e.g., he spent more than three years perfecting the Chinese Water-Torture Cell escape before performing it in 1912). Unfortunately, the design of the biography resembles a textbook more than a volume befitting its dazzling subject. However, photographs and memorabilia documenting Houdini's superhuman feats (including escapes from jail cells and hanging upside-down in a straitjacket, suspended over a crowded Washington, D.C., street) inject excitement into the pages. Readers will be inspired by both Houdini's magic and enduring mysteries and by this subject's timeless message about the power of hard work and dedication. Ages 10-up.

Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From School Library Journal

Gr 5-9-In this engaging biography, Lalicki successfully weaves together information about the magician's personal life and his public exploits. Born Ehrich Weiss, Houdini started performing at an early age and followed his ambitions as they led him around the world, performing amazing stunts and illusions that baffled the crowds. The book recounts many of his most famous tricks, including his escape, handcuffed and chained, from a locked packing case submerged in a bay. Black-and-white reproductions of posters are liberally supplied as are publicity shots and dramatic photos of Houdini performing some of his most theatrical stunts. While this book is not as long or as detailed as Ruth Brandon's The Life and Many Deaths of Harry Houdini (Random, 1994), it will find an audience with students who are unfamiliar with the man and his incredible feats. An appealing, accessible introduction to a consummate artist.-Carol Fazioli, formerly at The Brearley School, New York City

Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
Gr. 5-8. This intriguing biography surveys the life of Elrich Weiss, better known as Harry Houdini. Born in 1874, Houdini rose to prominence as a magician and an escape artist whose feats amazed audiences, whose relentless drive for perfection propelled him to legendary status, and whose trade secrets are a matter for debate even today. Lalicki successfully presents Houdini as a man remarkable for his confidence, determination, and hard work; an immigrant's son who decided as a boy to restore his family's fortunes and, as a man, accomplished his goal. Lalicki also gives readers a portrait of the man in the context of his times. Particularly interesting are accounts of Houdini's efforts to expose fraudulent Spiritualist mediums, who exploited the public during the years following World War I, and the influenza epidemic of 1918. Laid out with many captioned photographs, theater posters, and advertisements, and using a good-size typeface, the book has an accessible look. An entertaining and enlightening profile of a remarkable man. Carolyn Phelan
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved