Harry Houdini Mysteries: The Houdini Specter

$7.99 US
Titan | Titan Books
On sale Jun 12, 2012 | 978-0-85768-621-3
Sales rights: US/CAN (No Open Mkt)
Will Harry Houdini’s penchant for exposing the trickery of mediums get him into a deeper mystery than he can handle?

Still struggling to make a name for himself in turn-of-the-century New York, Harry Houdini sees an opportunity for glory in exposing the tricks of the medium Lucius Craig. But to do so, he must work out how the medium managed to conjure a “spirit” while tied to a chair by Houdini himself—and how the apparition was able to stab an audience member to death and then disappear.

The Houdini Specter is the third thrilling adventure in a Sherlock Holmes-inspired series starring the legendary magician.
PRAISE FOR DANIEL STASHOWER:

“This is charming . . . it might have amused Conan Doyle.”
The New York Times

“In his first mystery, Stashower paired Harry Houdini and Sherlock Holmes to marvelous effect.”
Chicago Tribune

“Stashower’s clever adaptation of the Conan Doyle conventions—Holmes’s uncanny powers of observation and of disguise, the scenes and customs of Victorian life—makes it fun to read.”
Publishers Weekly

About

Will Harry Houdini’s penchant for exposing the trickery of mediums get him into a deeper mystery than he can handle?

Still struggling to make a name for himself in turn-of-the-century New York, Harry Houdini sees an opportunity for glory in exposing the tricks of the medium Lucius Craig. But to do so, he must work out how the medium managed to conjure a “spirit” while tied to a chair by Houdini himself—and how the apparition was able to stab an audience member to death and then disappear.

The Houdini Specter is the third thrilling adventure in a Sherlock Holmes-inspired series starring the legendary magician.

Praise

PRAISE FOR DANIEL STASHOWER:

“This is charming . . . it might have amused Conan Doyle.”
The New York Times

“In his first mystery, Stashower paired Harry Houdini and Sherlock Holmes to marvelous effect.”
Chicago Tribune

“Stashower’s clever adaptation of the Conan Doyle conventions—Holmes’s uncanny powers of observation and of disguise, the scenes and customs of Victorian life—makes it fun to read.”
Publishers Weekly