Study in Scarlet (Sherlock Holmes Graphic Novels Adaptation #2)
Graphic novel adaptation by Ian Edgington with art by Ian Culbard.
"A Study in Scarlet" is the first published story of one of the most famous literary detectives of all time, Sherlock Holmes. Here Dr. Watson, who has just returned from a war in Afghanistan, meets Sherlock Holmes for the first time when they become flat-mates at the famous 221 B Baker Street. In "A Study in...more
"A Study in Scarlet" is the first published story of one of the most famous literary detectives of all time, Sherlock Holmes. Here Dr. Watson, who has just returned from a war in Afghanistan, meets Sherlock Holmes for the first time when they become flat-mates at the famous 221 B Baker Street. In "A Study in...more
Published
(first published 1875)
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I have not read Holmes. I have certainly encountered him in movies, television shows, essays, and other pop-cultural artifacts, but I have not read his cases and have no firsthand experience with his interlocutor, Arthur Conan Doyle. So when I speak of A Study in Scarlet as adapted by I.N.J. Culbard and Ian Edginton, you’ll kindly bear my context in mind. I cannot speak to their faithfulness to their source material but to the quality of their final product alone.

For the most part at any rate. I...more

For the most part at any rate. I...more
Review from Badelynge.
This isn't the first time A study in Scarlet has been adapted into a graphic novel but it is still a welcome addition. Ian Edginton is very faithful to Doyle's story. The book is quite pleasing all round. Ian Culbard delivers a style of art that doesn't ape the Strand illustrations, rather he chooses to caricature the characters using Doyle's descriptions. Everyone is instantly recognizable throughout. A narrow palette of colours is used, mainly all shades of brown and blue...more
This isn't the first time A study in Scarlet has been adapted into a graphic novel but it is still a welcome addition. Ian Edginton is very faithful to Doyle's story. The book is quite pleasing all round. Ian Culbard delivers a style of art that doesn't ape the Strand illustrations, rather he chooses to caricature the characters using Doyle's descriptions. Everyone is instantly recognizable throughout. A narrow palette of colours is used, mainly all shades of brown and blue...more
The stories of Sherlock Holmes were one of my first introductions to the mystery genre and so it was with a mixture of excitement and hesitancy that I read this volume. There was excitement in re-reading this fantastic story and seeing how it would translate to images. However, there was hesitancy in reading a well-crafted story in another form and wondering if the new form ruins the precision of the story and the memory of what the story was and meant.
Fortunately, this full colour graphic novel...more
Fortunately, this full colour graphic novel...more
Dec 29, 2012
Leanne Kinkopf
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
Children as intro to Holmes; Fans of Holmes
This is a very faithful comic book adaptation of the classic Holmes story. I consider the story a little less solid than the other Holmes stories--in the novella, the second half is occasionally boring to me. It moves along much more quickly in this adaptation, which was very pleasant, especially if one has already read the novella.
The artwork is more cartoonish than I usually like, but it's very well done and I enjoyed it. The only thing that bothered me about the art was the way Holmes looked.
...more
Jun 18, 2011
Lauren
rated it
5 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
graphic-sequential-art,
library-loan
Great adaptation of the classic Holmes story. I love the genesis of Holmes and Watson's relationship as seen through Watson's narrative. I think this story shows Holmes' classic deduction and reasoning skills better than some of the other books.
Love the graphic re-interpretations. I'd love to see more of these...
Love the graphic re-interpretations. I'd love to see more of these...
This works much better as a novel rather than a graphic novel. The clever pacing and the feeling that you're always trying to catch up is disrupted by the graphic novel format (which is still a fun way to read this book, but not ideal).
I never read the Sherlock Holmes novels!
I really enjoyed this graphic novel. The drawing style, the colours (very atmospheric) and the texts were really good. At the end of the first part I was kind of confused, how Holmes found the murderer, but the last chapters wrapped that part up very nicely.
It also confused me that this novel is actually the second one in the Sherlock Holmes graphic novel series - since it is the first Sherlock Holmes novel - but I found out, that this baby was published...more
I really enjoyed this graphic novel. The drawing style, the colours (very atmospheric) and the texts were really good. At the end of the first part I was kind of confused, how Holmes found the murderer, but the last chapters wrapped that part up very nicely.
It also confused me that this novel is actually the second one in the Sherlock Holmes graphic novel series - since it is the first Sherlock Holmes novel - but I found out, that this baby was published...more
May 06, 2012
Sarah Sammis
rated it
3 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
borrowed,
read-in-2012
A Study in Scarlet by by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was first published in Beeton's Christmas Annual. It's been more than 20 years since I first read it but after seeing Moffat's take on it as "A Study in Pink" I wanted to refresh my memory. Ian Edginton's graphic novel version of A Study in Scarlet was a fun way to revisit the original mystery.
This is the story that introduces Dr. Watson, newly returned from Afghanistan, to Sherlock Holmes. Watson is in need of affordable housing and Holmes is in n...more
This is the story that introduces Dr. Watson, newly returned from Afghanistan, to Sherlock Holmes. Watson is in need of affordable housing and Holmes is in n...more
Reason for Reading: This was a Cybils '10 nominee and I hadn't read it by the time judging was due as it was not a contender by that time and I'm just now getting to it.
I was a young teenager when I read through all of Doyle's Sherlock Holmes and since then I've only reread the occasional short story as it appears in anthologies that cross my path so my memory is dim on the book. A bit brighter on the various movie versions but that is still some time ago as I don't watch much TV anymore; all th...more
I was a young teenager when I read through all of Doyle's Sherlock Holmes and since then I've only reread the occasional short story as it appears in anthologies that cross my path so my memory is dim on the book. A bit brighter on the various movie versions but that is still some time ago as I don't watch much TV anymore; all th...more
I was quite surprised at how well written this graphic novel was. I've read a few of Doyle's short stories, but i decided to pick up this graphic novel from the library and read it in one night. the art was good, not too flashy or too minimalistic, but it was just right. i recommend this to readers of classic lit who want to read a graphic novel and see how the graphic novel can be used to showcase classic stories like Doyle's or someone else's.
Mar 08, 2011
Michael
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
graphic-novels,
review
Review from Badelynge.
This isn't the first time A study in Scarlet has been adapted into a graphic novel but it is still a welcome addition. Ian Edginton is very faithful to Doyle's story. The book is quite pleasing all round. Ian Culbard delivers a style of art that doesn't ape the Strand illustrations, rather he chooses to caricature the characters using Doyle's descriptions. Everyone is instantly recognizable throughout. A narrow palette of colours is used, mainly all shades of brown and blue...more
This isn't the first time A study in Scarlet has been adapted into a graphic novel but it is still a welcome addition. Ian Edginton is very faithful to Doyle's story. The book is quite pleasing all round. Ian Culbard delivers a style of art that doesn't ape the Strand illustrations, rather he chooses to caricature the characters using Doyle's descriptions. Everyone is instantly recognizable throughout. A narrow palette of colours is used, mainly all shades of brown and blue...more
Mar 06, 2011
Reader
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
books-read-december-2010
There have been plenty of graphic novel adaptations of Sherlock Holmes stories over the years, but Ian Edginton and I.N.J. Culbard knew what they were doing when they chose to try their hand at this, the first of the Sherlock Holmes adventures. In this novel Holmes and Watson meet for the first time and the doctor war veteran gets to see firsthand how Holmes' intelligence and ingenuity solve the crime of two men murdered alongside the mysterious word "RACHE". The story is all the more remarkable...more
A fair adaptation of Arthur Conan Doyle's classic. Graphics: The faces of characters are exaggerated, almost to the line of caricature, to represent their personalities more obviously; but 'the prominent chin' of Sherlock Holmes wasn't THAT prominent in my imagination. The animation of faces and gestures didn't flow so well together with the text. The colouring was superb: the gloomy Victorian London streets and the brightness of Utah deserts, was beautifully contrasting. Quick 2 hour read, good...more
This is a graphic noval adaptation of Conan Doyle's Study in Scarlet. It was pretty well done, but it didn't have the spark that this team's adaptation of Hound of the Baskervilles did. (I think I also prefer the story of Hound of the Baskervilles, which undoubtedly had something to do with my enjoyment of this book.) Overall, a solid graphic adaptation, which I hope will inspire some graphic novel fans to read the original work.
This is the second Sherlock Holmes adaptation that I've read that made me say, A) How did this go over my head when I read the stories?, and B) what the heck, Arthur Conan Doyle? Hideous natives? Mormon slave cults? Why is this material so revered? I guess it is a product of its time but I'm not enthused and I think I'm gonna stop reading these.
Unbelievable that this s the first in the series good way of writing and after seeing the fact behind the murder no one want the man to be punished the way he died naturally is to be applaused holmes way of judging and its explanations are quite more interesting and confusion of watson & his trial in judging assures the smiling part
This graphic adaptation of the first Sherlock Holmes story is done in full-color and keeps most of the original text intact. It gives you great insight into Holmes' thought process and shows how Watson ended up partnering with the eccentric detective. It's definitely worth a read for younger fans of Sherlock Holmes.
Maybe it was because I'm less (read: not at all) familiar with the story than Hound of the Baskervilles, but I liked this volume even better than the last one I read.
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Edginton sees part of the key to his success coming from good relationships with artists, especially D'Israeli and Steve Yeowell as well as Steve Pugh and Mike Collins. He is best known for his steampunk/alternative history work (often with the artist D'Israeli) and is the co-creator of Scarlet Traces, a sequel to their adaptation of H.G. Wells' The War of the Worlds. With 2000 AD we has written L...more
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