Eine Studie in Scharlachrot

Eine Studie in Scharlachrot (Sherlock Holmes #1)

4.1 of 5 stars 4.10  ·  rating details  ·  67,665 ratings  ·  2,424 reviews
Eine Studie in Scharlachrot erzählt von der ersten Begegnung zwischen Sherlock Holmes und Dr. Watson sowie ihrem ersten gemeinsamen Fall. Auf der Suche nach einer Unterkunft in London trifft Dr. Watson den »Beratenden Detektiv« Sherlock Holmes, und sie beziehen gemeinsam eine Wohnung. Holmes' exzentrische Art und seine geheimnisvolle Tätigkeit wecken Watsons Neugier. Kein...more
Paperback, 189 pages
Published November 21st 2007 by Insel Verlag (first published 1887)
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Stephen
The birth of a legend....
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This is it...the novel in which Sir Arthur ushered the world’s greatest second best detective (after Batman) into our collective consciousness. Being the non-conformist rebel that I am, I started off bassackwards by reading The Valley of Fear and then The Adventure of the Final Problem because those were the two stories with Moriarty in them. Shocking, I know, but that’s just how I roll. Btw, it still really chaffs my cheeks that Doyle wrote 56 short stories and 4 nove...more
Nilesh Kashyap
An anti-review
I don’t read reviews of books, of which I am damn sure I will be reading it very soon. Now, I don’t know how this habit affects my reading.

So, what happened was..
I was not aware of the fact that “I had to be surprised when the second part of the book starts and wonder what happened to the story with Sherlock Holmes in it and how that mystery was solved! Moreover, I had to wonder whether the second part was from some other book, somehow got binded in my copy and curse the publish...more
Tatiana
Arthur Conan Doyle's first Sherlock Holmes novel is utterly unimpressive. In short, the book starts like this:



and mid-way turns into this:



And I am not even joking. The novel begins with Holmes and Watson meeting, moving into their Baker Street apartment and then investigating a murder of a man found in an abandoned house. At the half point, however, the story completely changes its course and becomes the most awkward introduction of the murderer's back story and motives involving Mormons, polyga...more
Jacob
Mormons and murder, aaaiiieeeee!
For those who prefer their Sherlock Holmes served up pure and without digression (and I am one), it is possible to skip over the long omniscient passage entitled "The Country of the Saints" without losing "the scarlet thread of murder." Indeed, rare is the reader who can resist the temptation to leapfrog the Great Alkali Plain and learn the fate of the person responsible for the singlular expression of horror and hatred on the dead man’s face at No. 3 Lauriston Ga
...more
Scott
In A Study in Scarlet (1888), Arthur Conan Doyle introduces his master sleuth to the world, warts and all. Aside from his well-known arrogance and tactlessness, Holmes' other flaws – as well as his odd but impressive knowledge – are cataloged by his astonished new roommate, Dr. Watson:
1. Knowledge of Literature. — Nil.
2. Knowledge of Philosophy. — Nil.
3. Knowledge of Astronomy. — Nil.
4. Knowledge of Politics. — Feeble.
5. Knowledge of Botany. — Variable. Well up in belladonna, opium and poisons g
...more
Tanu
Rating: 4 stars

This is my first Sherlock Holmes novel and yes, I am ashamed for not having read it earlier. I suppose that, what LOTR trilogy is to the fantasy world, Sherlock Holmes is to the detective/crime genre. Reading it is kind of like getting a degree. So anyway friends, I have graduated and am finally an official member of the crime/mystery fandom.

And I am most definitely a part of the bandwagon of Sherlock Homes fans.
description

Okay, off to the plot them:

“A Study in Scarlet” introduces the famo...more
Terry
_A Study in Scarlet_ is an interesting book for several reasons. Here we have the first written adventure of Sherlock Holmes and get both the first introduction to the famous sleuth and his comrade Dr. Watson, as well as details of their first meeting. We are treated to a somewhat humorous précis of Watson’s first impressions of his strange room-mate (detailed in several other reviews) and even manage to see a fledgling Holmes occasionally wrong, or at least not 100% accurate, in some of his ini...more
Kelly
Who knew that Mormons make the perfect gothic villians? And so long ago! You didn't even have Big Love for inspiration. Bravo, well done you! And any simplicity of plot is totally forgiven for lines like "the scarlet skein of murder runs through the plot of life." You delicious mind, you.

Also, this definitely could have been subtitled The Seduction of Doctor Watson. You can see how Holmes and Watson grow from strangers (where Watson's kind of iffy about sharing rooms with a crazy man) to friends...more
Bonnie
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Part I

The Storyline
This being the first story in the Sherlock Holmes series, this is also the introduction of the two main characters: Holmes and Watson. After meeting one another they agree to move in together as they were both in need of a roommate. Shortly after, a man is discovered as being murdered and Sherlock Holmes is asked to evaluate the scene to determine if there is any evidence of who may have done it. The only clue is a woman’s weddin...more
Cameron
This is the first of Sherlock Holmes, it is very cool and I enjoyed it. The very interesting part of the book is that it is Doyle's first try at historical fiction. In the introduction it talked about how he was not very accurate with his history but remember it is fiction. I find it interesting because I am a member of The Church of Jesus Crist of Later-Day Saints also known as "the Mormons".
In this book the two people that are murdered are Mormons and the Murderer is not Mormon but lived amon...more
A.U.C.
I really, really enjoy mystery and detective novels. So when I told a friend about this, she asked "and have you ever read the Sherlock Holmes series?" I said "no", yet I knew what my next mission was: to read them.

So, I started the book, and unlike most 19th century novels, this book was entertaining from the first page onwards. It was extremely well written, its language being precise and sort of scientifical (like Sherlock Holmes himself) but also with an entertaining and, if I may say so, go...more
K.D. Oliveros
Dec 28, 2011 K.D. Oliveros rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to K.D. by: Kristel
Shelves: 501, detective, british
Not related to the book yet

This is the book that completes my 2011 Goodreads Reading Challenge! 275 books and I still have 3 days to spare. My first target was 200 because that was the the annual target of the author Nicholas Sparks as he said in one of his interviews. But I achieved it in September so I changed it to 250. But I achieved 250 on the last week of October and I thought I could still read 25 more. So, here I am, proud that I was able to read 275 books!!! Last year, I only read 196 b...more
Kemper
Sherlock Holmes is a dick. And I don’t mean that as a reference to the character being a private detective.

Sure, he may be brilliant, but he’s also arrogant, condescending, cold, rude, self-absorbed and generally an insufferable douche bag. If Watson wasn’t such a brown-noser, he’d have snapped and pimp slapped the shit out of Holmes about five minutes after meeting him.

It’d been a long time since I’d read any of the Holmes stories, and I thought I’d check some out after watching Robert Downey...more
midnightfaerie
A Study in Scarlet by Sherlock Holmes was another enthralling and suspenseful mystery. Doyle wins again with his ever lovable Holmes and Watson duo. This was his first Holmes story, and I loved that it was a novel and not a short story. To me, there was much more depth and description to the characters that really added to the novel. I'm in the progress of creating a list of reasons that these books are classics, but I don't know yet, if it's just the Holmes stories that I consider classics, or...more
Becky
I really enjoyed this story, and now begin to wonder why I've never read any of these Sherlock Holmes stories before. (I did like to read the Slylock Fox mystery cartoon in the Sunday paper as a kid, but that hardly counts. :P)

This is the very first of all of the SH stories, and it introduces us to Holmes, Watson, and the methodology of Holmes's practice and brilliance. I loved Holmes's witty, dry humor, and his quirkiness and genius. I also loved Watson's more socially accepted gentleman role....more
Ouise
I found this book in a second-hand bookshop and as always with Conan Doyle, it transported me to a whole different world. This is the first Sherlock Holmes' novel and it mixes the crime genre with the travelling-to-uncommon-places narration that I am fond of in Conan Doyle. I particularly liked the first encounter with Sherlock Holmes, the description made by Dr. Watson of his new peculiar "flatmate" and the discussion they have about the brain-attics. Sherlock Holmes explains to Dr. Watson that...more
Timmy
The first book in the Sherlock Holmes series is far from Doyle's best, but it's a great success for evoking Mormon apologists to somehow find deep in the recesses of their polygamist pockets a lost "historical inaccuracies" card---discolored, peeling, forgotten, and foul-odored.

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle went on to write superior Sherlock Holmes novels; Joseph Smith never improved his religion.

Sir Doyle himself was a spiritualist and he never apologized or recanted his criticism of the Mormons as t...more
Jonathan
There often tends to be something special about the very first book of an incredible series of brilliant books. And those adventures chronicling the pursuits of Sherlock Holmes are no different. Yet at the same time the shine of this book is let down by a single piece of narrative featuring love, Mormons and revenge. How, you ask, does that fit into a Sherlock Holmes adventure? Not to mention the very first Sherlock Holmes adventure. Therefore let me explain.

A Study in Scarlet introduces the now...more
Hayes
[See below for review, which contains spoilers.]

I confess: I have never read "A Study in Scarlett", although I have read many other Holmes stories. The book has been challenged in Virginia* because of its unsuitability for younger readers (I might agree that 6th grade is a little young for Sherlock Holmes), and because of its portrayal of Mormons and Mormonism.

There is nothing I like more than reading a challenged book.

* Albemarle School Board to vote on expelling 'A Study in Scarlet'

= = = = =...more
Valerie
Jun 15, 2011 Valerie rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Valerie by: Gerson
Maybe I should've starting reading the books before watching the movie (the one with the guy from Iron Man) because I was kind of disappointed. I should also mention that I’ve seen no other adaptation—at least I don’t remember seeing any.

I knew that Holmes is supposed to be a conceited and arrogant fellow. This I’m okay with but what I wanted was for Watson not to add fuel the fire, it made Holmes more, I don’t know, complacent I guess. Watson didn't really help any either. Maybe this will chang...more
Callista
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Fernando Évora
O que mais gosto nos livros policiais é a técnica com que o autor nos cativa, o suspense sempre presente, e, claro, o mistério. Na minha adolescência devorava policiais (quando me perguntam que autor mais li, respondo que foi Agatha Christie), procurando descobrir o criminoso antes do Poirot, da Miss Marple ou Tommy e Tuppence. Qual o motivo? Qual o furo do alibi? Qual a arma? Enfim, perguntas que nos colocamos e que os grandes autores de policiais teimam quase sempre em nos surpreender com as s...more
Cristopher
I like a lot this first Holmes' novel. It's very easy to read and I finished in two days. The descriptions made by Sir Arthur about Utah are absolutely amazing. I guess that he was in that place at least one time. I think that the change of subjects in the middle of the book was a little abrupt. Maybe he could do a better job in that sense, interspersing the two stories in the book. Now I will start to read the second book, "The Sign of Four".

Me gustó bastante la primera aparición de Holmes. Es...more
 Marla
3.5 stars. Buddy Read. Forward was fascinating. I really enjoyed the beginning of the book and learning about Dr. Watson and how he and Sherlock Holmes met and became colleagues.

Part 1 (4 stars) was lively and interesting. Part 2 (3 stars) was much slower, but I liked the love story. Jefferson Hope was quite a determined man and I was cheering for him. It was tied together nicely in the end.

I was glad to hear that subsequent Sherlock Holmes tales do not have the lengthy flashback to explain the...more
Kaixuan
I am only on Chapter 3, but I am enjoying the book alot. I didn't expect the book to be in the voice of Watson, because i thought Sherlock Holmes would have been the main focus of the book. I like the language that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle uses, they are a little tough to understand, but it makes the book seem more worthwhile to read.

I found it exciting when the author first mentions that the character (it is written in first person, which makes it easier to follow, since the focus is mainly on on...more
Jared Millet
Well, that was cool. Having seen umpteen bazillion variations of Sherlock Holmes in film, TV, and literary pastiche, it's pretty much impossible to come at the original source material "cold," and yet A Study in Scarlet still managed to surprise me.

Even with the recent Cumberbatch and Downey Jr. versions fresh in my mind, the Holmes my brain defaults to is Jeremy Brett. Doyle's Holmes in this first novel is younger than any of those, except possibly Cumberbatch, and his arrogance isn't nearly as...more
Raleigh
I watched BBC's "Sherlock" before I read this. I'm a bit biased, and I don't want to drag this review on long. So.

The only character I was interested in hearing speak was Sherlock Holmes. I know a lot of people hate Sherlock and that makes it hard for them to enjoy the book, but I like Sherlock's attitude. He's cold and arrogant, but completely brilliant. His deductions during a case would seem far-fetched because when first hearing them they appear to come from nowhere, but he always explains h...more
Hayley
Feb 11, 2009 Hayley rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Mystery lovers; people who watch "House"
Recommended to Hayley by: Kris Sandburg
Doyle's first book about Sherlocke Holmes introduces us to Dr. Watson, who meets Holmes and provides a reasonable and likable narration of the latter's bizarre prowess as a detective.

The most enjoyable parts of this, for me, were Watson's own observations and characterizations of Holmes. I think there could have been much more of them, but I suppose that's what the later books and short stories are for.

I'm not going to describe the particular mystery Holmes solves in detail. I will, however, sec...more
ninefly
excerpt from detailed review here:
http://angeltyuan.blogspot.com/2010/0...

review of audio book read by John Telfer

This introduction of the uniquely gifted detective Sherlock Holmes, seen through the eyes of the humble ex-army doctor John Watson, appeals as both a historical mystery, as well as a deeply entertaining portrait of the eccentric sleuth. It was fun to follow along with the easily sympathized Watson as he struggles to figure out both what Holmes has already been able to deduce from the...more
Laura Twist
A Study In Scarlet - A fast-paced, witty novel which introduces us to the now well-known characters Holmes and Watson. I was really eager to read his after the duo's recent reincarnations on the big and little screens, and I wasn't dissapointed.

Steven Moffatt is correct in saying it is not Holmes who is old-fashioned but the world around him which has become 'old-hat', Holmes here is a fantastically modern man. An eccentric, odd character with incredible perceptions, whom you become inexplicably...more
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A Study in Scarlet  (Sherlock Holmes, #1)
A Study in Scarlet (Sherlock Holmes, #1)
A Study in Scarlet (Sherlock Holmes, #1)
A Study in Scarlet (Paperback)
Sherlock: A Study in Scarlet (Sherlock Holmes, #1)

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Arthur Conan Doyle was born the third of ten siblings on 22 May 1859 in Edinburgh, Scotland. His father, Charles Altamont Doyle, was born in England of Irish descent, and his mother, born Mary Foley, was Irish. They were married in 1855.

Although he is now referred to as "Conan Doyle", the origin of this compound surname (if that is how he meant it to be understood) is uncertain. His baptism record...more
More about Arthur Conan Doyle...
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (Sherlock Holmes, #3) The Complete Sherlock Holmes The Hound of the Baskervilles (Sherlock Holmes, #5) The Complete Sherlock Holmes, Volume II The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes (Sherlock Holmes, #4)

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“What you do in this world is a matter of no consequence. The question is what can you make people believe you have done.” 235 people liked it
“I consider that a man's brain originally is like a little empty attic, and you have to stock it with such furniture as you choose. A fool takes in all the lumber of every sort that he comes across, so that the knowledge which might be useful to him gets crowded out, or at best is jumbled up with a lot of other things, so that he has a difficulty in laying his hands upon it. Now the skillful workman is very careful indeed as to what he takes into his brain-attic. He will have nothing but the tools which may help him in doing his work, but of these he has a large assortment, and all in the most perfect order. It is a mistake to think that that little room has elastic walls and can distend to any extent. Depend upon it there comes a time when for every addition of knowledge you forget something that you knew before. It is of the highest importance, therefore, not to have useless facts elbowing out the useful ones.” 202 people liked it
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