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Philip K. Jones reviews Mark of the Baskerville Hound by Wilfred Huettel

“This author is new to Sherlockian fiction, with his only previous book a history of U-Boat warfare in the Gulf of Mexico.  For a first effort at Sherlockian fiction, or any fiction, for that matter, this book is remarkable.  The events recounted take place in the 1980s and the story is hard to define.  It is a mystery and a horror story and a romance, all combined.  It has supernatural elements if one chooses to read it that way, yet it is also intimately involved in psychology and, of all things, Theology.  Perhaps I can explain my viewpoint best by recalling a lesson in Theology passed to me long ago.  “The God of Christians is a God of Infinite Love.”  The point of this lesson was that damnation is not a process enforced on a person by God, but rather it is a process that the person chooses, freely, over the chance to love.

There are many reasons that people choose not to love, mostly from fear of rejection or of revealing oneself to the intimate knowledge of another, but all have their roots in pride.  People choose pride over love and lose what they most desire, a chance to give and to receive love.  This book presents a series of characters who are given chances to love and to place the well-being and happiness of others before their own.  This book tells us their stories, although that is not what it looks like until well along in the tale.

The protagonist is a retired New York policeman who was injured in line of duty.  As a retirement hobby, he has taken up Sherlockian inquiry and has specialized in “The Hound of the Baskervilles.”  After some years of writing and corresponding, he is invited to be a guest lecturer in Literature at Oxford with expenses paid and a small stipend.  In the depths of winter, a power failure at the University disrupts classes and living accommodations, so our hero elects to visit Dartmoor during this enforced vacation.  Time spent in a small country inn introduces other guests and local problems and the moors exercise their own magic.

The story begins with our hero trying to recover from his experiences on the moors and to put his life back together after a complex experience.  His nightmares and his increasing rejection of his surroundings are pushing him into madness and the process of curing him is one of teaching him to love, first himself, and then others.

The book is well-edited, thoughtful and moving.  Americanisms are appropriate to the narrator and the setting and viewpoint are intrinsically Sherlockian.  It contains something for every taste, action, mystery, horror, supernatural events and romance.”

Mark of The Baskerville Hound is available from all good bookstores including in the USA AmazonBarnes and Noble and Classic Specialities, in the UK AmazonWaterstones,  and for everywhere else Book Depository who offer free worldwide delivery. In ebook format there is KindleNookiPad and Kobo.

 

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Sherlock Holmes Society of London reviews The 1895 Murder by Dan Andriacco

“The title of The 1895 Murder by Dan Andriacco (MX Publishing,

www.mxpublishing.co.uk; £9.99/$16.95/€12.99) refers neatly to a play

based on ‘The Bruce-Partington Plans’, written by Professor Sebastian

McCabe of St Benignus College, Erin, Ohio. As he proved in No Police

Like Holmes and Holmes Sweet Holmes, Mac is a devoted Sherlockian

and a highly skilled detective, so when a man is shot dead outside the

theatre where he’s playing Mycroft Holmes, he and his brother-in-law

Jeff Cody are pleased to help find the killer. Well, mostly. Jeff‘s mind,

naturally, is on his impending wedding and the need for diplomacy with

his fiancée’s rather unpredictable parents. It’s a pleasure to visit Erin

again and to watch the solving of a particularly baffling mystery.”

The 1895 Murder is available from all good bookstores including in the USA  Amazon, in the UK Waterstones and Amazon, and for everywhere else Book Depository who offer free worldwide delivery. In ebook format there is KindleNookiPad and Kobo.

 

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Samuel Williams was a proud winner at the 2012 Southern California Book Festival this month

Samuel Williams was a proud winner at the 2012 Southern California Book Festival this month. His Sherlock Holmes novel – Anomalous – received the ‘Honorable Mention’ award in the hotly contested General Fiction category.

Anomalous – The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes is available from bookstores including in the USA Barnes and Noble and Amazon, in the UK WaterstonesAmazon and Book Depository (free worldwide delivery) and in electronic formats – iTunes (iPad), KindleNook and Kobo.

 
 

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THE WODEHOUSE / ROBINSON PANTOMIMES: WHERE’S WODEHOUSE?

“The literary archaeologists at Madame Eulalie have unearthed yet another rare Wodehouse tidbit from the distant past – a set of four playlets of political satire in pantomime form, jointly credited to Sir Plum and one Bertram Fletcher Robinson. The first, “A Fiscal Pantomime – The Sleeping Beauty” was published in the London Daily Express on Christmas Day 1903; the next was “Our Christmas Pantomime – Little Red Riding Hood; or, The Virtuous British Public and the Smart Set Wolf” which appeared inVanity Fair on December 8, 1904; “A Winter’s Tale – King Arthur and His Court” from Vanity Fair, December 14, 1905, and finally “The Progressives Progress – Some memories of 1906” which appeared inThe World, January 1, 1907.

For the uninitiated, pantomime is an art form rooted in antiquity and it has a strong link to Commedia dell’arte; it evolved as an English entertainment in the eighteenth century. Performed at Christmas, pantomime was (and is) a form of theatre incorporating song, dance, slapstick, cross-dressing, in-jokes, topical references and audience participation. Pantomimes are usually based on traditional fairy tales but adapted for comic or satirical effect as other characters and situations arise. Traditions include the leading male juvenile character (principal boy) to be played by a young woman, usually in tight-fitting male garments that make her gender evident; An older woman (the dame) is usually played by a man in drag. The animal is played by an actor in animal costume, often a horse or cow played by two actors in a single costume. Audience participation includes calls of “He’s behind you!” or (“Look behind you!”), and “Oh, yes it is!” and “Oh, no it isn’t!” The audience boos the villain and “awwwwws” the poor “victim” as in nineteenth-century melodrama.

The Wodehouse-Robinson pantos parody the debate in Britain surrounding tariff reform and proposed changes to tax law. The heroes (conservative) and villains (liberal) are variously represented: Little Red Riding Hood is played by “The Virtuous British Public” while King Arthur is “(Prime Minister) A.J. Balfour;” The Unionist Party is personified by “Queen Guinevere” and in Sleeping Beauty, The Tariff Reform League is portrayed by the “A dragon.”

Although they weren’t intended for actual production, while reading these farces the reader can certainly imagine himself amidst a raucous London Christmas audience of a century ago, delighting at the buffoons and heroes, the slapstick, the wicked political satire, the ridiculous costumery. Pantomime music most often combines well-known songs with lyrics re-written for the occasion, which encourage audiences to sing along as well. (Pantomime is seldom performed in the United States, and Americans misunderstand the word “pantomime” to refer to the art of “mime.”)

Bertram Fletcher Robinson (whose name evokes the recollection of how PGW sold “Something New” to the Saturday Evening Post under the grand name Pelham Grenville Wodehouse) was eleven years PGW’s senior. A well-liked writer of articles, satirical playlets, short stories, lyrics, numerous articles, poems and books, Robinson is today known primarily for assisting his friend Arthur Conan Doyle with the plot of The Hound of the Baskervilles….”

Read the full article here.

Bobbles and Plum, a PG Wodehouse Playlets Book by Paul R Spiring is available from all good bookstores worldwide including in the USA AmazonBarnes and Noble and Classic Specialities, in the UK AmazonWaterstones and Book Depository (free delivery worldwide).

 

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Love the way Charlotte is visiting the places in the book. I did the same with my two novels – Budapest, Havana, Alice Springs – great feeling to be where your characters are…. I did it before and wrote most of notes in those locations.

barefootonbakerstreet's avatarBarefoot on Baker Street

During a recent holiday to the South of France, I took a copy of Barefoot (second edition) along to the beautiful town of Narbonne which features at the start of chapter eleven.

Husband took a photo of me holding it beside the lovely canal de la Robine which I pictured quite accurately when I wrote about it – even though I’d never seen it before.

‘Narbonne was beautiful in the bright early-morning sunshine. The Canal de la Robine shone like a silver ribbon snaking through the centre of the town flecked by the little boats travelling its length towards the great Aude river.’

We also took this picture at Narbonne station, remembering how Red and Jude catch a train from here and travel to Paris where danger and adventure await them.  All that awaited husband and I that afternoon was a very nice lunch and an ice-cream!

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Posted by on September 29, 2012 in Uncategorized

 

Sherlock Holmes Society of London reviews: Anomalous – The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes

“Very few writers have tried to imagine what sort of things Holmes got up to, and what sort of people he met during his years living as the disaffected Irish-American, Altamont. He began his ‘pilgrimage’ in Chicago, so it’s natural that he would run into Diamond Jim Colosimo’s criminal organisation and encounter one of its youngest members, Al Capone. Natural too that he would visit the Café de Champion on West 31st Street, to meet its famous owner, Jack Johnson, the first black world heavyweight champion. The great boxer is actually the central character in a powerful novel, Anomalous: The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes featuring Jack Johnson and Alphonse Capone by Samuel Williams Jr (MX Publishing, £9.99/$16.95/€12.99). Johnson’s turbulent fortunes bring him to London, where two very different people, both black, have important rôles to play in a struggle to save both Johnson’s life and the security of the realm. You’ll recognise their names, I’m sure: Lucy Hebron and Steve Dixie…”

Anomalous – The Adventures of Sherlcok Holmes is available from bookstores including in the USA Barnes and Noble and Amazon, in the UK WaterstonesAmazon and Book Depository (free worldwide delivery) and in electronic formats – iTunes (iPad), KindleNook and Kobo.

 
 

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Philip K. Jones reviews Sherlock Holmes and the Dead Boer at Scotney Castle

“This is a first novel by an author new to Sherlockian fiction.  The presentation of Holmes and Watson is a bit different than is common in such works, but it does seem more sensible than others, both in the Canon and in the many pastiches available.  Holmes and Watson disagree and argue and look at the world quite differently than as we are accustomed to view them.  On the other hand, the world inhabited by this Holmes and Watson is quite different from that of the Canon and most pastiches.  It is a complex, gritty and more realistic world where things are seldom as they appear.

Early in the story as well as near the end, the author describes meals featuring a Turkish dish, Imam Bayildi, translated as “The Swooning Imam.”  In many ways, this dish is representative of the story as a whole.  Imam Bayildi is a main dish made with eggplant (aubergines) and a number of vegetables, herbs and spices.  In reality, the eggplant merely serves to provide neutral bulk and texture for the dish whose taste is compounded of the many flavors of the other ingredients.  In this story, the tale itself is complex and convoluted and not really believable, but it provides an excellent medium in which to present the gorgeous tapestry of places, characters, objects and opinions included by the author.

Holmes and Watson receive a peremptory summons to make presentations to a small society of wealthy Kipling fans.  In arriving early for the appointment, Holmes manages to scramble some of the plans for the event and this has consequences.  Plans are shifted and adjusted and complex events proceed with deviations.  A naked corpse is found in a pond on a neighboring estate and, from newspaper accounts Holmes decides that murder has been committed.  Watson objects and the dance begins.

The characters perform, the scenery changes and Holmes begins to realize his mistakes.  Dr. Watson comes to see that murder has been done and Holmes realizes the murder cannot be proven or prosecuted.  Clues contradict clues and the world shifts around as viewpoints change.  The author continues to present paradoxes and the characters act out their destined roles.  The modern world shifts its focus and Europe edges closer to the brink of war.

In addition to sharing my taste for complex prose and tangled events, the author also exhibits some talent in his fiction writing which does not appear in mine.  The only problems I could find were a very few anachronistic terms and a possibly over-active imagination.  Either the editor is quite capable or the author is most erudite or both contingencies apply.  A wide range of subjects are discussed and presented in complex language without becoming boring.  It was a real joy to read.”

Sherlock Holmes and the Dead Boer at Scotney Castle is available from all good bookstores including in the USA Barnes and Noble and Amazon, in the UK WaterstonesAmazon and Book Depository (free worldwide delivery) and in all electronic formats including Kindle and  iPad.

 

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Review of “Sherlock Holmes e i tesori di Londra” from Diario di Pensieri Persi, in Italian

“Recensione ‘Sherlock Holmes e i tesori di Londra’ di Tracy Revels

Pubblicato da Stefania Auci

Cari lettori,

è stato pubblicato dalla Gargoyle Books un romanzo particolare, che ha tutti i numeri per diventare una perfetta lettura estiva, un mash up in cui trovano posto il voodoo, l’Inghilterra vittoriana, fate, fantasmi e una meravigliosa storia di amicizia. Protagonisti? Sherlock Holmes e John Watson. Questo volume, pubblicato in inglese con il titolo di Shadowfall, è stato seguito da un secondo, Shadowblood, pubblicato in Gran Bretagna a marzo 2012, dalle tinte più gotiche e dark e ambientata nel mondo della stregoneria. Personalmente, sono curiosa di leggere questo secondo volume poiché il primo mi ha intrigato e divertito, anche se ha lasciato delle perplessità che descriverò successivamente. 

Trama: 

Dove sono finiti i corvi della Corona, la Pietra di Londra, il Cuore di San Giorgio, ossia i principali tesori della capitale britannica di fine Ottocento? Esiste un collegamento tra questi furti e la raccapricciante serie di trafugamenti di cadaveri avvenuta nel Cimitero di Highgate, a cominciare dalla sparizione delle spoglie di una giovane americana creola? Alla Regina Vittoria e agli esponenti più importanti dell’establishment politico non resta che affidarsi a Sherlock Holmes. Ma se questa volta il celebre investigatore non fosse estraneo all’intricata vicenda? E se il suo metodo d’indagine, fondato sulla serrata applicazione della logica e sulla rigorosa osservazione, non bastasse a risolvere il caso?… “

Read the full article here.

 

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Philip K Jones reviews Sherlock Holmes and the Whitechapel Vampire by Dean P. Turnbloom

“This is a first novel by an author new to Sherlockian fiction who has undertaken to unite two of the most popular Sherlockian pastiche subjects into a single volume.  The Database of Sherlockian pastiches, parodies and related fiction lists ninety five efforts to have Sherlock uncover the identity of ‘Saucy Jack.’  Further, the database also lists fifty five efforts to tell of Sherlock’s efforts to cope with Vampires.  Two of the listed items combine these themes.  A short story, “The Children of the Night,” and the current volume are the only combinations of these themes, in so far as I know.

This book also combines two investigations.  Holmes is convinced that an Italian immigrant, accused of the murder of a young Italian lady on the ship that brought them from Italy, is innocent.  Holmes’ efforts to ‘clear up’ this case lead him into the investigation that Scotland Yard are bungling in front of all the world.  Prejudice, sloppy investigative techniques and an inability to look for a bloodthirsty murderer outside the lower classes have hamstrung the Yard’s investigation.

Holmes’ investigation is meticulous and revealing.  It is also unwelcome to ‘the powers that be.’  The cooperation he receives is spotty at best so the final resolution of the ‘Ripper killings’ is left clouded and uncertain.  Holmes solves his problems, has the Italian immigrant released and finds employment and new lives for him and his brother-in-arms.  The prostitute murderer disappears from history, we hope.

The book is reasonably well-written, with only minor editing errors.  The investigations are well covered and the characters are sharply drawn.  The book is not to my personal taste, but it is an interesting and well conducted effort.  The science aspects are imaginative and the settings are well done.”

Sherlock Holmes and The Whitechapel Vampire is available through all good bookstores including The Mysterious Bookshop in New York, Barnes and Noble and Amazon, and in all electronic formats including KindleNookKobo and iBooks (iPad).

 

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dtbloom's avatarAmerican Abattoir

If you can filter out the British accent (pardon me, Steve), this is a delightfully illuminating talk with much that is of practical use…please enjoy and share with your friends…

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Posted by on August 21, 2012 in Uncategorized