David Jaher's The Witch of Lime Street: Seance, Seduction, and Houdini in the Spirit World explores
the little-discussed rivalry between master illusionist Harry Houdini and a
much-publicized Boston spirit medium named Margery Crandon.
This book is a fascinating story that rapt me as a page-turning thriller. I can't recommend it too highly!
Houdini was considered
the greatest escape artist of the early 20th century, but by the 1920s, he
turned his energies to unmasking spiritist frauds who claimed to have contact
with the dead. Set against a backdrop of Jazz Age excess and anxiety, Jaher, in
his first book, tells the story of Houdini's epic confrontation with a
spiritist whose popularity rivaled his own.
World War I and the Spanish
influenza laid waste to a generation of young men in Europe and left the world "teetering on the brink of a new dark age."
Observers like Sir Arthur Conan
Doyle, who eventually became an ardent advocate of spiritualism (and friendly
nemesis to Houdini), believed that the loss of so many loved ones would turn
bereaved families seeking comfort "toward spirit communion." While seances
became all the rage on both sides of the Atlantic and Conan Doyle lectured on
the "New Revelation," reputable scientists began to explore the paranormal to
determine the true nature of psychic phenomena. One particular group associated
with Scientific American magazine put together a contest that
would award $5,000 to anyone able to successfully prove his or her abilities.
Among the judges was Houdini, whose career as a magician made him a formidable
spiritist debunker.
All but one medium tested by this group -- the genteel
Crandon -- were conclusively demonstrated to be frauds. Through a combination of feminine
seduction and illusionist skill that even Houdini admired, Crandon became the
one psychic to almost win the respect of the scientific community and outshine
Houdini as an entertainer. Jaher's narrative style is as engaging as his
character portraits are colorful. Together, they bring a bygone age and its
defining spiritual obsessions roaring to life.
Don't let 2015 pass without reading this book!
I received a free copy of this book as part of the Blogging for Books program in exchange for my honest review here.
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