What does help, however, in a life-change, adventure-filled way, is Stuart's discovery that his great-uncle Tony was a great magician (of the stage variety sort), who disappeared shortly after World War II. His workshop, with all the miraculous mechanisms of the title, was never found.
But his uncle left a string of clues to its whereabouts...and Stuart begins to follow them, with the help of triplet April...and it's a hunt that takes the two of them deep into the town's history, and pits them against an opponent desperate to claim Uncle Tony's magic for her own.
And (this is the spoilery time travel part), there's time travel at the end, involving a quick glimpse of 19th-century stage magic. But I won't say anything else about that. It is a plot device, an interesting and exciting one that Zings with great Zing, but it is not Deep time travel, of the sort where the time travel is the gateway to much development of story and character.
Up until the time travel bit, there's nothing that couldn't happen in real life (although mostly it doesn't). It's the sort of fun, puzzle-solving mystery/adventure that is diverting as all get out to read about (in particular, I really appreciated how place dependent it was--it's the sort of book with a Useful black and white map on its boards), and the growing friendship between Stuart and April was very nicely done.
Three of us enjoyed it (both my 12 year old and my husband read and liked it lots), and I recommend it without reservation (especially to any kid fascinated by magic). My youngest son (9 years old) was the only one not taken with it--he stopped reading halfway through, because he had just read Hugo Cabret, and thought that this one "didn't reveal itself" the way Hugo did--meaning that in Horten's story, Horten can't gradually reveal things the way Hugo, who knows things the reader doesn't, can. So the straightforward progression of the mystery seemed unsatisfactory. Each to his own.
The sequel, Horten's Incredible Illusions, just came out...it is waiting for me downstairs, and I am looking forward to it!
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