March Books 1) The Return of Sherlock Holmes, by Arthur Conan Doyle

Mar 05, 2011 09:08

As I suspected, Holmes did not stay dead for long (apologies if anyone feels that is a spoiler, but the story of his return was published in 1903 which I think is a decent interval). None of these thirteen stories particularly stands out for me, though I noticed a general trend away from high politics towards domestic drama - for instance in "The Adventure of Abbey Grange", Holmes and Watson confront the murderer but decide that they like him more than his victim so let him go. I also sensed a stronger geographical specificity - one story is set in am unidentified Oxbridge college, another explicitly in Cambridge. There are some fairly blatant retreads as well - "The Six Napoleons" is the same story as "The Blue Carbuncle" but with busts instead of geese. Still, they are all engaging reading; one almost feels that Doyle has stopped trying too hard and found a gear that suits him.

rereads, writer: arthur conan doyle, bookblog 2011

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