Houdini’s Library

Houdini's Library by Barb Rosenstock

Yes, Hou­di­ni was a magi­cian and an escape artist. Even though he was born in 1874, most of us still think of him when magi­cians are dis­cussed. He was world famous. My lungs ache when I think about his under­wa­ter escapes from chains and strait­jack­ets. But that’s not what this book is about.

Har­ry Hou­di­ni was a reader.

I sel­dom find his­tor­i­cal fig­ures who were as addict­ed to read­ing as I am. My grand­fa­ther often said they’d bet­ter bury me with a book in my hands or St. Peter wouldn’t rec­og­nize me. Hou­di­ni was one of US!

I have to take a side­step to say that antic­i­pa­tion of a new Barb Rosen­stock title makes my heart pal­pi­tate. She always finds some­thing to write about that I didn’t know, cre­at­ing a book that I remem­ber ever after.

In par­tic­u­lar, The Secret Gar­den about Nek Chand’s rock gar­den in Chandi­garh and The Noisy Paint Box about Kandinsky’s synes­the­sia and The Camp­ing Trip That Changed Amer­i­ca about the cre­ation of our nation­al parks top my list of her books. (You’ll be glad you sought them out.) Those are just a few of her 23 books about wide-rang­ing top­ics. Each one fills me up with learn­ing some­thing new, some­thing vital.

Houdini’s Library is essen­tial read­ing for all of us who are ral­ly­ing to pre­serve our pub­lic libraries and free our belea­guered librarians.

Hou­di­ni under­stood the impor­tance of books. So much so that he added 15,000 of them to his library along with thou­sands of prints and the­atri­cal bills. The focus of his col­lec­tion was “mag­ic, the­ater, and history.”

Although Hou­di­ni had very lit­tle for­mal edu­ca­tion, the boy who became the man was always a read­er. He had access to the world!

He even “hired his own librar­i­an. Alfred Becks lived in Houdini’s house, sort­ing and cat­a­logu­ing the mag­ic collection.”

There is so much to learn from this book, not only about Houdini’s life on the world stage, which pro­vides con­text, but about his life with books. That mat­ters even more to me. Rosenstock’s writ­ing shines.

illustration from Houdini's Library by Barb Rosenstock and Mar Delmar, published by Alfred A. Knopf
illus­tra­tion copy­right Mar Del­mar, from Houdini’s Library,
writ­ten by Barb Rosen­stock, pub­lished by Alfred A. Knopf, 2026

ntrin­sic to the sto­ry, the art pro­vides great dra­ma. Mar Del­mar cre­ates draw­ings, then cuts paper, then … I’m not going to ruin the dis­cov­ery for you. The light­ing of the scenes in the book is won­drous, the­atri­cal. Pho­tos and descrip­tions in the Illustrator’s Note will find your eyes widen­ing, your jaw drop­ping. What could be more fit­ting for a book about the incred­i­ble Houdini?

The book’s design and lay­out are rem­i­nis­cent of a time long ago and yet the tech­niques pro­vide a mod­ern per­spec­tive. There’s so much to look at! To absorb! The art adds depth to the reader’s under­stand­ing of this man’s life.

There’s a dou­ble-page spread near the end of the book in which every one of us read­ers will rec­og­nize our­selves. I find that thrilling.

There is so much to admire about Houdini’s Library but at the heart of it: I know now that the world-famous celebri­ty was a READER. I will nev­er for­get that.

Houdini’s Library
writ­ten by Barb Rosen­stock
illus­trat­ed by Mar Del­mar
pub­lished by Alfred A. Knopf, 2026

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

1 Comment
Oldest
Newest
David LaRochelle
1 month ago

I’m reserv­ing it at my library now!