Parlour Magic by Perkins, Henry
I picked up 'Parlour Magic' expecting a quaint historical curiosity, a peek into Victorian party games. What I got was a deeply eerie puzzle that's been stuck in my head for days.
The Story
The book presents itself as a practical guide. Chapter by chapter, it lays out magic tricks: making a candle flame change color, causing a specific book to fall from a shelf, silencing a room with a gesture. The props are ordinary—handkerchiefs, glasses of port, specific types of wood. But the instructions are bizarrely precise about things that don't matter (the exact grain of the table) and vague about the actual method. Interspersed are first-person accounts from a man named Henry, who claims to be compiling these 'diversions.' His tone shifts from charming host to increasingly desperate observer, hinting that each 'trick' is a delicate negotiation with unseen forces, and a mistake isn't just a spoiled party—it's a breach of etiquette with something waiting in the shadows of the room.
Why You Should Read It
This book is a masterclass in slow-burn dread. The horror doesn't come from monsters on the page, but from the chilling space between the lines. You start questioning everything. Is Henry a fraud, a madman, or a reluctant guardian? The 'magic' feels like ritual, and the parlour becomes a charged arena. What got me was the atmosphere. You can almost smell the cigar smoke and feel the heavy drapes, making the subtle wrongness that creeps in all the more effective. It plays on the fear of the familiar becoming alien, of your own home holding secrets.
Final Verdict
Perfect for readers who love atmospheric, psychological horror and historical mysteries. If you enjoyed the creeping unease of Shirley Jackson or the enigmatic puzzles in Mark Z. Danielewski's 'House of Leaves,' but prefer it wrapped in a Victorian package, this is your next read. It's not a book for jump scares; it's for that lingering feeling of being watched in an empty room. A must for anyone who's ever wondered what the walls in an old house have seen.
This text is dedicated to the public domain. It is available for public use and education.
Susan Anderson
1 year agoThe index links actually work, which is rare!
Amanda Thompson
1 year agoSolid story.