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Out today: Silent Meridian – Time Traveler Professor – Book 1

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle is obsessed with a legendary red book. Its peculiar stories have come to life, and rumors claim that it has rewritten its own endings. Convinced that possessing this book will help him write his ever-popular Sherlock Holmes stories, he takes on an unlikely partner, John Patrick Scott, known to most as a concert musician and paranormal investigator. Although in his humble opinion, Scott considers himself more of an ethereal archeologist and a time traveler professor.

Together they explore lost worlds and excavate realms beyond the knowledge of historians when they go back in time to find it. But everything backfires, and their friendship is tested to the limits. Both discover that karmic ties and unconscionable crimes have followed them like ghosts from the past, wreaking havoc on the present and possibly the future.

Silent Meridian reveals the alternate histories of Conan Doyle, H.G. Wells, Houdini, Jung and other notable luminaries in the secret diaries of a new kind of Doctor Watson, John Patrick Scott, in an X Files for the 19th century. Stay tuned for A Pocketful of Lodestones; book two in the Time Traveler Professor series by Elizabeth Crowens.

Silent Meridian – Time Traveler Professor – Book 1 is available from all good bookstores including The Strand Magazine,  Amazon USA, Amazon UK, Waterstones UK and for free shipping worldwide Book Depository. In ebook format it is in Kindle.

9781780929774

 

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Book Giveaway For The Bird and the Buddha

Book Giveaway For The Bird and the Buddha

It is 1878, and Dr. Poppy Stamford has reluctantly rekindled her relationship with Sherlock Holmes. Though it has been almost four years since they parted on uneasy terms and he continues to suppress his feelings for her, they are still intrigued and inspired—and frustrated—by each other. When her beloved uncle is arrested in relation to a series of murders near the British Museum, Poppy and the burgeoning detective set out to find the evidence to set him free. Can they track down the real killer in time to save Uncle Ormond from the rope? In the latest adventure of Poppy Stamford and Sherlock Holmes, the two not only uncover secret societies, but find themselves soul-searching to clarify their beliefs about an array of moral issues including euthanasia and the death penalty … as well as their feelings toward one another.

The Bird and The Buddha – A Before Watson Novel – Book Two is available from all good bookstores including  Amazon USA, Amazon UK, Waterstones UK and for free shipping worldwide Book Depository.

9781780929361

 

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Review of Lives Beyond Baker Street

“A book worth waiting for!

This solid volume, subtitled “A Biographical Companion of Sherlock Holmes’s Contemporaries”, contains over 800 one-paragraph descriptions of individuals who were well known in the times of Holmes and Dr. Watson. This will be an invaluable tool for readers seeing an unknown name while reading the Canon, as well as those who wish to add something extra while “editing” some more of Watson’s notes for modern publication.

I wish that I’d had this book decades ago. I discovered the Holmes Canon in 1975 when I acquired an abridged copy of “The Adventures” from a friend in a trade. Not long after, I borrowed ahead on my allowance to buy a complete Doubleday edition. I devoured it, but there were many references in the original stories that could have been made much clearer to that ten-year-old me if I’d had this book.

There have been numerous other books that list characters from the Canon, including Michael Hardwick’s “The Sherlock Holmes Companion” and his “The Complete Guide to Sherlock Holmes”, along with Molly Carr’s “A Sherlock Holmes Who’s Who”. This book excellently elaborates on individuals that weren’t directly involved in Holmes’s cases, but were still easily identified in Our Heroes’ times. My only regret is that this book, which lists so many important people of that era, leaves out two of the most important, Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson, men who are arguably more real – at least to me – than any of the other 800 listed.”

Reviewed by David Marcum

Lives Beyond Baker Street is available from all good bookstores including The Strand Magazine, Amazon USA, Amazon UK, Waterstones UK and for free shipping worldwideBook Depository.

9781780929064

 

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Getting to Know Marcia Wilson

Geri Schear's avatarGeri Schear

You Buy Bones: Sherlock Holmes and his London Through the Eyes of Scotland YardTell us about yourself and the types of books you write.

I wrote Rumble in the Tunnel through an indie press and I have gained nothing from it, not one penny, but I got worlds in experience.  It was a collection of short stories, some poetry, an historical fantasy, and several interconnected tales of the genre “Appalachian or Southern Gothic”. I’ve written several in-depth essays and articles about karstic (cave) watersheds. To prove I wasn’t crazy enough, I cranked out a voluntary thesis on saltpetre mining and an analysis of the first discovered three-toed sloth titled What is this Thing, Thomas Jefferson?  That one I’m still the most proud of because it was a massive detective hunt and it turned into a nesting box full of twists and turns. This year I did flash fictions for e-presses and I’m loving the challenges.

You Buy Bones is the first, opening…

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Posted by on May 6, 2016 in Uncategorized

 

Getting to Know David Marcum

Geri Schear's avatarGeri Schear

Author Picture Author David Marcum

I have a confession to make. I adore David Marcum. I love his style of writing and the gentle respect he shows for his fellow writers. His stories are among my favourites, not only of Sherlock Holmes tales, but of short fiction of any sort. (As an editor, he’d probably scold me for having three ‘ofs’ in that sentence, but he’d be very kind about it.) I hope when he makes his next pilgrimage to the UK he’ll stop off in Ireland. I’ll have the kettle on.

Hi, David. Tell us about yourself and the types of books you write.

First of all, thank for providing this opportunity!

I live in eastern Tennessee with my wife and son. After my first college degree (at normal college age), I became a Federal Investigator with an obscure U.S. Government agency. When that agency was shut down and eliminated, I…

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Posted by on May 4, 2016 in Uncategorized

 

Getting to Know Steve Emecz

Geri Schear's avatarGeri Schear

Steve Emecz and me July 2015 Steve Emecz and Yours Truly in EDubli

Steve Emecz, publisher, humanitarian and all-round nice guy IS MX Publishing. With all he accomplishes, I suspect he has some sort of device that allows him to add extra hours or even days into the space-time continuum. Each of his projects would be a full-time job for lesser mortals, but Steve balances them all with apparent ease, and gives each one equal passion.

I had the pleasure of meeting him last year when he come to Dublin. We may have shared a drop. Or two…

Let’s start with an easy one. Tell us about yourself.

I was born and live in London and have spent around twenty years working in technology and the last ten years (it’s MX’s tenth birthday on 1st November) publishing books – the last eight publishing Sherlock Holmes books – around 230 so far. I’m married to Sharon…

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Posted by on May 1, 2016 in Uncategorized

 

Review: The Case of the Rondel Dagger by Mark Mower

graspthenettlehard's avatarGraspthenettlehard's Blog

It is always a joy when the reader gets to learn something (in a respectful way) about a chapter in history.  Mr. Mowers is an established historian of crime and we are treated to his original character, Mr. Mickleburgh who may possibly reflect an aspect of the author’s voice.  The Rondel Dagger of the title is the linchpin clue brought to this humble expert of ancient weapons by a young Sherlock Holmes. We enjoy his voice, which is markedly different from Watson, but equally good.  He simply sees things in a different way and traces of an avuncular admiration tinge this (sigh) short story.

1880 shows us the meeting of these two men, both masters at their field regardless of the disparity in ages. Mr. Mickleburgh is entrenched, respected, and largely invisible to the world but Holmes is already rising in what he calls his “financially precarious vocation.” The conversation between the…

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Posted by on May 1, 2016 in Uncategorized

 

Review of The Bird and The Buddha – A Before Watson Novel – Book Two

”With eloquent, refined, and precise prose, this novel calls forth the ethos of the time and the nature of Sherlock’s mind.

In A.S. Croyle’s The Bird and The Buddha, a young Sherlock Holmes stalks a serial killer with the aid of a lovely young doctor whose need to solve the mystery is almost as great as her passion for the romance-averse detective. In this, the second book in Croyle’s Sir Arthur Conan Doyle-inspired Before Watson series, questions arise that threaten to lead the sleuthing pair to some unsettling conclusions: is the killer someone whose goal is to end suffering, or are the murders just cleverly disguised to look that way? And why are a small Buddha and a dead bird always left at the scene? As Sherlock and the doctor investigate the case, and their feelings for each other, the trail leads them frighteningly close to home.

Croyle’s graphic evocations of gritty, rough, late-1800s London and her portrayal of the quirky, indomitabledetective as he may have been at the beginning of his career, well before he met up with Dr. Watson, are sure toplease fans of Sir Arthur’s tales. Told in the voice of Dr. Priscilla “Poppy” Stamford, whose intellect, desire, andcourage led her to break with convention and follow her dream to become a medical doctor, the tale reveals how hermeasured, deliberate, and purposeful life became chaotic when she met Sherlock Holmes. Poppy’s attraction toyoung Sherlock was immediate, deep, and confusing. The young man possessed an astounding intellect and waslogical to a fault; disdainful of love, he could be warm, but rarely intimate. Despite the fact that he admitted to thefeelings she aroused in him, she came to see that he was unable to commit to another human being.

This novel satisfies on all levels; written in eloquent, refined, and precise prose, it calls forth the ethos of thetime and the nature of Sherlock’s mind, even as it is also able to portray Poppy’s more emotional nature and tosuccessfully carry the rising tension of the chase to find the killer before the wrong man is condemned. In unraveling the convoluted case, Croyle introduces the methods of crime detection of the era; the rough lives of workers and thepoor; the sorry state of British medical practice; the history of hospitals whose work dates back to the twelfth century;the place of women in society; the Buddha’s teachings on suffering; attitudes toward euthanasia, and more. The storyis further enhanced by the inclusion of famous persons of the time, including the flamboyant Oscar Wilde and thesensitive, exotic Rabindranath Tagore.

Croyle’s plot is well-developed, and her powerful imagery is authentic to the era. The mystery unfolds with effective and appropriate pacing, and her sensitive character development illuminates the difficulties that arise when two well-matched intellects try to reconcile the feelings they have for each other with their very different world views.The result is a rich and satisfying reading experience that never ceases to be entertaining.”

Reviewed by KRISTINE MORRIS,  Foreword Reviews 

The Bird and The Buddha – A Before Watson Novel – Book Two is available from all good bookstores including  Amazon USA, Amazon UK and for free shipping worldwide Book Depository.

9781780929361

 

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Review: A Few Lessons from Sherlock Holmes

graspthenettlehard's avatarGraspthenettlehard's Blog

Peter Bevelin’s small book (81 pages) is every argument you ever wanted to win against another Holmesian–or every defense you needed to backup someone you felt was right.  Period.

Imagine what a book would be like if Watson had simply lifted out all examples of his friend’s reasonings and philosophies and placed them in a separate volume.  Here it is.

In these trying times, where students are re-learning the art of debate in wangling grades or proving classroom participation, their jobs counselor would be advised to recommend this book–or the instructor place this on the reading list.  You’re getting more than the most famous quotes of Sherlock Holmes–you are getting the context of these statements and why they act as linchpins upon the plots and intrigues that fuel human nature.

Part reference, part Sun Tzu, part history lesson and part social science with a smattering of Heraclitian Logos, A Few…

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Posted by on April 11, 2016 in Uncategorized

 

Interview: Steve Emecz, Publisher MX Publishing

Interview: Steve Emecz, Publisher MX Publishing

donsmithwrites's avatarThe Sherlock Conversations

INTERVIEW: Steve Emecz, MX Publishing from Don Smith on Vimeo.

A couple of weeks ago I sat down and had a conversation with publisher Steve Emecz. His company, MX Publishing has published several books on Sherlock Holmes and education!

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Posted by on April 10, 2016 in Uncategorized