Monday 28 May 2012

The Return of Sherlock Holmes

Blurb: Evil masterminds beware! Sherlock Holmes is back! Ten years after his supposed death in the swirling torrent of the Reichenbach Falls locked in the arms of his arch enemy Professor Moriarty, Arthur Conan Doyle agreed to pen further adventures featuring his brilliant detective. In the first story, ‘The Empty House’, Holmes returns to Baker Street and his good friend Watson, explaining how he escaped from his watery grave.


In creating this collection of tales, Doyle had lost none of his cunning or panache, providing Holmes with a sparkling set of mysteries to solve and a challenging set of adversaries to defeat. The potent mixture includes murder, abduction, baffling cryptograms and robbery. We are also introduced to the one of the cruellest villains in the Holmes canon, the despicable Charles Augustus Milverton. As before, Watson is the superb narrator and the magic remains unchanged and undimmed.


Thoughts: As a recently converted Sherlock Holmes fan, I was very excited to read this one. Having just seen him fall down a cliff, I was intrigued to see how Conan Doyle would bring our beloved Mr Holmes back. I admit, I was a little underwhelmed at the manner of his survival, but the twist that followed his return in the first story The Empty House, I enjoyed a lot. I think that Conan Doyle's short stories are consistently good, but this collection wasn't quite as good as the earlier ones. Saying that, it contains one of my favourites, The Dancing Men. Although I would not recommend this as an introduction to Sherlock Holmes, the stories are still first class, and Holmes is as brilliant as ever.




 
   

2 comments:

  1. Sherlock Holmes is indeed a wonderful person. ACD did a serious mistake by killing him (but we know that later he realised that). It's funny though, how nowadays it has become a sort of tradition for every adaptation of SH to "kill" him and then resurrect him from his "death".

    Happy that you enjoyed it.

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    1. You're right, it's as if that has become the most important part of his story... Funny really as it was, as you say, a mistake.
      Thank you :)

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