

He also loved his wife dearly and he wanted his fans to like and admire him. Incredibly confident and rather arrogant, he knew what he wanted and he did not waver from getting what he was looking for. Through Harry’s words, as well as his actions, readers will come to understand what Harry Houdini was like. In this unique cartoon creation the authors tells a gripping story about one of Harry Houdini’s remarkable escapist feats. Just in time his wife Bess arrives and gives him a kiss – a kiss which is more than it seems. He never looses his calm and plays up to the crowd, quickly earning their support. When he gets there he talks to his audience, which is large, and then he prepares himself for the ordeal to come.

Then the time comes for Harry to go to the bridge. He hates it when someone suggests that he his anything but the best magician in the world. One reporter greatly angers him with his comments and it takes Harry’s wife Bess a good while to calm down her volatile husband. He then attends a breakfast at his hotel where he talks to the press. He even – against the wishes of the policeman present – jumps off the bridge so that he knows what to expect later that day. On the day of the handcuff trick, Harry goes to the bridge to see what he is up against. Harry hopes that pulling off this stunt will show the world that he is indeed the best magician around and they will want to see him perform in the theatre all the more. Then Harry will jump off one of the local bridges and, hopefully free himself from the handcuffs before he drowns in the slightly-above-freezing water.

The plan is that he will have one of the local police officers handcuff his hands behind his back and shackle his legs together. Harry Houdini is in town and he is not only going to perform in one of the local theatres, but before that he is going to do a truly astonishing trick. Houdini: The Handcuff King Jason Lutes and Nick Bertozzi Graphic Novel Ages 12 and up Hyperion, 2007, 078683902-3 It is May in 1908 in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
