There are many angles an author can explore when writing about the horrific events of World War II and the Holocaust. In his latest novel, The Curse of Pietro Houdini, author Derek B. Miller takes an unusual and captivating approach: he highlights the Nazis’ attack on Italy and the country’s historic art and architecture.
The setting of the book is a Benedictine abbey near Montecassino, Italy. It is 1944, and the Allied forces are trying to push back the German army. Miller tells the story of a major military operation that has gone mostly unnoticed. It is not a heroic story, like the attack at Normandy Beach. In this instance, American pilots, mistakenly believing the monastery to be occupied by Nazi forces, dropped more bombs on this building than any other single building during the war. The battle raged on for months, killing many people. Just the year before, thousands of irreplaceable manuscripts, paintings, and other art had been hidden in the abbey for safekeeping. Two officers, a German and an Austrian, worked with the monks to load much of the art onto carts and move it out to Rome ahead of the invasion.
The book follows two protagonists, Pietro Houdini and the young person he rescued from a gutter, as they approach Montecassino Abbey. As his name implies, Houdini is a master of illusion. He is a larger-than-life character who, by his own description, claims to be the “master artist and confidant of the Vatican.” His assistant is Massimo, a fourteen-year-old orphan whose parents were killed during a bombing in Rome. Both of these characters — along with the many others they encounter during their journey — have something to hide.
Massimo is the narrator of this story, recounting the circumstances that brought them to Montecassino and the experiences that led Houdini to perform the stunts he did. Houdini educates Massimo in the art of misdirection and sleight of hand in order to save the artwork hidden in the monastery. Throughout their trials and tribulations, they are joined by a monk, a cafe owner who will murder to protect her family, a nurse with a past to conceal, and a wounded German soldier who does not want to return to battle. The group becomes, in the author’s words, “a posse of misfits who had nothing in common but a generic and shared compulsion to keep on living.” Together, they will try to thwart the Nazis and save others.
The Curse of Pietro Houdini is a rich work of historical fiction propelled by high-stakes risks and powerful bonds. Though the artwork depicted in the novel is fictitious, Miller is able to shed light on a real masterpiece and an amazing, little-known piece of history.