Another collection of Sherlockian pastiches, edited by Michael Kurland, but this time with a very specific theme: trying to explain the activities actually undertaken by the Great Detective during the 'hiatus', i.e. the period between his "death"(1891) and "rise"(1894). The contents of this collection are:
(*) Introduction by Michael Kurland
1) 'THE BEAST OF GUANGMING PARK' by Michael Mallory: a thoroughly enjoyable story, with subtle hints thrown at a surprising lot of intriguing ideas.
2) 'WATER FROM THE MOON' by Carolyn Wheat: a very competent story of Holmes in the far east.
3) 'MR. SIGERSON' by Peter Beagle: another very good story that shows how thin a line was treaded by the Great Detective, even while performing those astonighing feats of deduction, and how easily things can be waylaid.
4) 'The Mystery of Dr. Thorvald Sigerson' by Linda Robertson: the 4th successive story featuring Holmes as Sigerson, and the weakest.
5) 'THE CASE OF THE LUGUBRIOUS MANSERVANT' by Rhys Bowen: another superlative adventure featuring memory-deprived Holmes solving a murder, in the presence of Dr. Sigmund Freud no less!
6) 'The Bughouse Caper' by Bill Pronzini: interesting premises, but simply overdrawn to have any impact left for the end.
7) 'REICHENBACH' by Michael Kurland: the best story of this collection, and you should really get hold of Kurland's other Professor Moriarty stories on a priority basis!
8) 'The Strange Case of The Voodoo Priestess' by Carole Bugge: too long, too long-drawn with all its attempt to mix exotica with murder, and one of the weaker stories.
9) 'THE ADVENTURE OF THE MISSING DETECTIVE' by Gary Lovisi: a very good story mixing Reichenbach falls (obviously), science, Tibetan wisdom, and a tremendous role played by Watson!
10) 'CROSS OF GOLD' by Michael Collins: a superb pastiche, and a hint to the origin of another great detective of the present who fights for justice.
11) 'God of the Naked Unicorn' by Richard Lupoff: a farce, nothing less-nothing more.
To sum up, it is indeed difficult to find so many good stories of repeat-reading value in an anthology, and hence this anthology is indeed worthy of 5-star rating. Recommended.