
The Mysteries of Harris Burdick by Chris Van Allsburg, 1984.
Harris Burdick isn’t exactly a mystery story, not even really a story exactly, but it is mysterious. Most of the book is pictures, and that’s kind of the point. The premise of the book is that a mysterious stranger known only as Harris Burdick approached a publisher about some stories that he had written and illustrated. As examples of his work, he gave the publisher a collection of illustrations he had done for each of his stories with accompanying captions. The publisher loved the illustrations, but Harris Burdick didn’t keep his appointment to bring in the complete stories the next day. When the publisher tried to contact him about the stories, he was never able to find Harris Burdick and never heard from him again. However, the publisher continued to be intrigued by the pictures and wondered what the stories were like, so his children and their friends wrote their own stories about them. The pictures are therefore presented as a collection, and readers are invited to imagine the stories that they are part of.

I remember one of my teachers using this book as part of a writing exercise, having us each choose a picture and write the accompanying story as we imagined it. Over the years, I’ve changed my mind about which picture is my favorite.

I thought for awhile that “The House on Maple Street” could have inspired the author himself in writing Zathura, the sequel to his other book, Jumanji, although there is apparently no direct link between the two.

The book is currently available online through Internet Archive. There is also a collection of stories called The Chronicles of Harris Burdick in which well-known authors present their own versions of each of the stories.
