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Maryka Biaggio

The Margery Crandon–Harry Houdini Feud, Belief, and Certainty

April 27, 2026 Leave a Comment

by Maryka Biaggio

Margery Crandon

In the 1920s, America’s fascination with the supernatural collided head-on with a rising faith in scientific proof. Few clashes captured that tension as vividly as the feud between Margery Crandon, a celebrated Boston medium, and Harry Houdini, the world-famous magician turned debunker. Their battle was never just personal. It exposed something enduring about us: how badly we want certainty—especially when facing the unknown.

Crandon, known to believers as Margery, rose to prominence by producing dramatic séances. Bells rang, tables moved, and a mysterious substance called ectoplasm appeared in darkened rooms. For supporters, these phenomena were evidence of life after death—comforting proof that loved ones were not truly gone. Skeptics saw them as clever tricks performed under conditions designed to suspend disbelief.

Enter Houdini. Having mastered illusion himself, he felt a moral obligation to expose mediums who claimed paranormal powers. His crusade intensified after the death of his mother, a loss that sharpened his resolve rather than softening it. Houdini wanted answers, too—but answers that could withstand light, scrutiny, and repeatable testing.

Their conflict peaked when Margery’s abilities were examined by the Scientific American journal. The tests were contentious, the observers divided, and the conclusions inconclusive. Believers accused skeptics of bad faith; skeptics accused believers of wishful thinking. Each side claimed reason, evidence, and integrity. What no one could agree on was what proof should look like.

This stalemate reveals a deeper truth. When the stakes are emotional, as in grief, hope, and fear of death, certainty becomes a psychological need, not just an intellectual goal. For Margery’s followers, certainty came from experience: I felt it, I saw it, therefore it’s real. For Houdini, certainty came from method: If it can be controlled, replicated, and explained, then it’s real. These are not merely different standards; they are different ways of coping with uncertainty itself.

The feud also shows how certainty can harden into identity. To doubt Margery was, for some, to threaten the comfort of belief. To accept her claims was, for Houdini, to betray reason and enable exploitation. Once certainty becomes moralized, dialogue collapses. The argument stops being about truth and starts being about loyalty—who you stand with, not what you can show.

A century later, the Crandon–Houdini feud still feels familiar. We see the same dynamics in debates over science, politics, and technology. We crave firm ground in a shifting world, and we often choose the kind of certainty that best soothes our anxieties.

The lesson is not that skepticism or belief is superior, but that our hunger for certainty shapes how we interpret evidence. Recognizing that impulse—our own as much as others’—may be the first step toward a more honest engagement with the unknown.

My novel Margery and Me explores all this terrain, and I invite readers to consider their own views on belief and certainty as they dip into the story.

Maryka Biaggio is the author of Eden Waits, The Point of Vanishing, and The Model Spy. Her novel with Regal House, Margery and Me, releases in the summer of 2026. Maryka’s fiction has won several accolades, including the Willamette Writers Award, an Oregon Writers Colony Award, the Historical Novel Society Review Editors’ Choice, La Belle Lettre Award, the U.P. (Upper Peninsula of Michigan) Notable Books Award, and a Regional Arts and Culture Council grant. She served on the Board of the Historical Novel Society North America Conference since 2015, and she lives in Portland, Oregon.

Filed Under: Literary Musings, Regal House Titles Tagged With: Historical Fiction, Houdini, Margery and Me, Margery Crandon, Maryka Biaggio, spiritualism

That’s My Story – Maryka Biaggio

April 21, 2026 Leave a Comment

RHP staff had the pleasure of sitting down with Maryka Biaggio, author of Margery and Me, to talk about her path to publishing as well as her approach to the writing craft. We are delighted to share her answers with you!

When did you start writing?

I started writing in grade school. I found a short-story contest advertised on a matchbook and told my mother I was going to enter. Being busy with cooking, cleaning, and doing laundry for a husband and five children, she said something like, “That’s nice. Now get out of my way.” I submitted a story and anxiously waited to hear back. They never responded, and I hadn’t saved a copy of the story, so who knows what it was about—probably something about the hijinks my siblings and I got into when left on our own. [See photo, right, of my siblings and me making a pyramid.]

Do you ever use your cell phone to compose your work or track your ideas? Are there any author/writing apps you recommend?

I absolutely adore Scrivener, a writing tool that lets me put everything I need in one place—not just the chapters, but character sketches, photos of important places, website addresses for essential information, and even marketing materials. You could say it keeps me from straying too far from the novel in progress because it allows me to put all my resources in one place. And I also have Scrivener loaded on my phone, which is great on those occasions when I’m out and about and have some idea I want to record lest I forget it.

What is the most cringe-worthy thing someone has said when you tell them you’re a novelist?

“I’ve always wanted to write a novel. When I find the time, I’ll bang out a bestseller. How hard can it be?”

There’s a fair bit of interest, scientific and otherwise, in the links between creativity and insanity. How crazy must someone be to be a good author?

A good author has to be a little crazy. How else could they stand to spend endless hours putting words down on a page and hoping that the story they build will actually find its way out into the world? It’s a rough business, and I can encourage only those with thick skin and lots of perseverance to undertake the writing of a novel.

How do you develop your characters?

I find I have to write my way into my characters. I’ve chosen quite an array of real people as subjects—ranging from a nineteenth-century con woman to a model-turned-spy during World War II. I couldn’t be more dissimilar from those two characters, both of whom were gorgeous and wily, so I often spend weeks, sometimes months, trying to find the voice. But when I’m on my morning walk or baking a pie, and the character starts talking in a way that sounds like how I’ve imagined them, I know I’ve found their voice! It’s as if, after a great deal of mulling and research, my subconscious finally comes through for me. That’s the magical part of writing. [See photo of The Model Spy book cover, left.]

Maryka Biaggio is the author of Margery and Me, releasing from Regal House Publishing on April 21, 2026.

Filed Under: Author Interview, Regal Authors, Regal House Titles, That's My Story Tagged With: Historical Fiction, interview, Margery and Me, Maryka Biaggio, That's My Story

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Regal House Publishing is the parent company to the following imprints:

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