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Hardcover Houdini's Box: The Art of Escape Book

ISBN: 0375406360

ISBN13: 9780375406362

Houdini's Box: The Art of Escape

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good*

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Book Overview

In this uniquely brilliant and insightful book, acclaimed essayist and psychoanalyst Adam Phillips meditates on the notion of escape in our society and in ourselves. No one can escape the desire and... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Author Escapes from Finishing

Houdini's Box author Adam Phillips digs up more than he can catalog in this slender volume of psychology on the notion of escape. The former child psychotherapist cogently dissects Houdini, "a man who was liberating himself only to be able to liberate himself again later." Phillips' probing of Houdini's background is a lively discourse and believable answer to what would provoke a man to continually perform ever-increasingly dangerous escapes. The writing is full of pithy gems, such as: "What one is escaping from is inextricable from, if not defined by, what one is escaping to." But the book also feels incomplete at 177 pages. Just as the book warms up, the author suddenly fades away. Ironically, the last essay is on the reclusive poet, Emily Dickinson. Phillips begins, "When the poet Emily Dickinson died in 1886 at the age of fifty-five, most of her neighbors hadn't seen her for well over twenty years." Phillips examination of escape, except for Houdini's profile, is done in a hurried fashion. The author only gave a cursory look at the psychological stones unearthed within the three profiles of Dickinson, a young girl, and a grown man. Perhaps Phillips' main goal was to provoke questions, which he does often and well. Thankfully, he does avoid glib conclusions. But a deeper understanding may have been gleaned if Phillips kept examining the dark treasures uncovered in the psyche, instead of escaping from them. Bohdan Kot

Old and not-great at that

Was there a time when this was the stuff I believed actually healed people? After an intensive period of reading books on the brain and its neurochemical 'ecosystem' capacities- this book was a bit of an escape for me. Reading it, one reminisces over the many previous and albeit superior volumes of this intellectual vein. This was, after all a relatively simple concept- the escape process- from either real or imagined stimuli, as rooted in some other inner perception of fear and a process that is repetitive and regenerative and eventually harmful to the psyche and relationships. Escape is itself the problem with the intial fear or memory, buried and unexamined. As previous reviewers have mentioned, the Houdini parts were both accessible and productive to what I suppossed was a theme- but how hard is it to pull Houdini into an escape metaphor? When the subjects stretched to some of the Doctor's patients and then to Emily Dickinsons late life retreat into solitude- things just got all wet. Still, it is an interesting little novelty of a book and has an element of cautionary charm. There is also nothing in it that could be otherwise disputed or provocative. As many mental health professionals are exploring reverentially the biochemical, and evolutionary nature of consciousness, memory and mental illness- there is that notion of "Here we go again! Buying everything hook line and sinker." Hearing some of the voices of past-glorious psychoanalytical solemnity, was a bit of a kick!

An excellent Sunday on my back porch.

Both the fan of magic and the psychotherapist in me read Houdini's Box ---- with our feet propped up on the back porch railing, on a September Sunday afternoon. The psychotherapist in me respects Adam Phillips' way of provoking thought without claiming any corner on "the truth." (If you like being introspective about the human psyche, this is a good one.) But mostly, the fan of magic enjoyed Phillips' take on Harry Houdini. There is little doubt that Houdini would be proud to be receiving so much attention 75 years after his death, but I think he would especially like becoming an archetype for the human condition.If your taste runs toward mixing introspection with entertainment, and if you are curious to discover what you may have in common with "the great mystifyer," the two of me definitely recommend this book.
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