Baker Street Irregulars discussion
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What are you currently reading?


I also liked Gentlemen and Players a lot. Even though it was not written in that I-wanna-be-a-Netflix-movie style that you see way too often today, I think it would make a great miniseries. Didn't like the sequel quite as much, but agree about the writing, and Jane Harper.


Well, yesterday morning I finished Lestrade & the Mirror of Murder by M J Trow, it was a bit of fun fluff, worth reading.
Yesterday I read SH & the Giant Rat of Sumatra by P D Gilbert, not a bad story, but padded out with a back story that became ponderous in the extreme.
Today I am starting SH & the Queen of Diamonds by S Hayes & D Whitehead, I'll keep you posted on this soon.

I take it that you have not read The 39 Steps ?

Apparently, 29 yr old Buchan killed himself by cutting his own throat on the day of Mary Jane Kelly's (last of the "canonical" victims) funeral.




Only about a third into it, not much suspense but the writing is good, as is the relationship between Wilde and Doyle.
I did read "The Seven Per Cent Solution" some time ago, and liked it, though I was not a fan of the film except for - oddly enough - the unusual casting of Robert Duvall as Watson. He would never have occurred to me as a Watson, but I actually thought he was quite good.

I have only a teensey-weensey nit picking criticism on UK terms. No cents in the UK (pennies) - also it's whisky (Canada too) not whiskey - that spelling is only used in the USA and Ireland.


I think the biggest error the author made was trying to bring the world of A C Doyle's characters into the tale at all. The author almost emasculated Holmes, by attempting to alter his character so badly, as well as that of his Boswell. Can any Sherlockian honestly be expected to have John, Sherlock & Mycroft fit into this fantasy ?
Perhaps it's my age (69) but I felt the fluffy feeling of her characters make it a teenage only affair, just at the age when the adult feelings are budding into adult territory. It's the 1st novel from this author I have read, an

I was happy to have Langdale Pike (tittle for tattle) in another SH adventure he's a bit of a slippery character, but SH puts up with his affectations and antics - so who am I to argue with who SH decides to consort with ? The last line in the last tale re John in the garden would, have been more poignant (IMHO) if Mary's voice had just whispered John.


It was a similar situation for the actress Hedy Lamar (Hedwig Eva Maria Kiesler) who also faced such prejudice, and so her brilliant mind was ignored.
There are so many others who faced the same fate, but they are only two of the many female pioneers who made there mark even if they were (to a great extent) ignored due to the misogynistic times they lived in.

It's really four tales woven together which are :
1) The remembrance of a failed case which ended in a suicide.
2) The implication (of the above) was the reason SH retired to his Sussex idle and apiary.
3) SH relationship to and with Roger and his mother.
4) The trip to Japan, which could quite easily been left out entirely.

Nellie Bly shows up in one of my recent reads, "Chapel Noir" one of the Irene Adler mysteries, where Holmes is sort of a co-star.

Nellie Bly shows up in one..."
Read up on Nellie Bly, she was a heroin in her own life time. I certainly would never have had the courage she had to investigate the way asylums were run at that time, such bravery to be admitted as a patient, it just beggars belief.

Rubbish stories and the phrase "inconsiderate bastard broke his own neck" - really, would Sherlock ever say that ? and in the presence of ladies - never !

Way too long and not as good as Perry's Jane Whitefield series.



1 - 1 star, lyrics for a filk song.
1 - 3 stars, yeh to this one.
3 - 2 stars, for the Monty Python experience.
4 - 5 stars, for the fun feel.
5 - 2 stars, as not really SH
6 - 1/2 a star, total nonsense, thumbs down.
7 - 1 star, thumbs down for this one.
8 - 3 stars, and I don't go for comic strip, but, none the less, fun.
9 - 2 stars, as not really SH.
10 - 2 stars, as more Jack Reacher than SH.
11 - 1 star, as not really SH.
12 - 3 stars, above average even though in the wrong era.
13 - 1 star, as not SH.
14 - 3 stars, an updated Hound of the Baskervilles, very entertaining.

The McGovan Casebook (Experiences of an Edinburgh Detective) by James McGovan (real name William Crawford Honeyman,1845-1919) whose short stories (ostensibly the accounts of a real detective, but fictional) which were serialised in The People's Friend magazine (a Dundee publication, still going) in the late 19th century. The stories were written with practical assistance from Detective Sergeant William Osbourne of the Edinburgh police force in 1882. Honeyman had earlier models as inspiration, such as William Russel's Inspector Waters (in Chambers Edinburgh Journal of 1849) and and James McLevy's memoirs of 1861.
The parallels are hard to avoid so I thought they might be of interest to others. Mr Honeyman was born in NZ in 1845 into a very musical Scottish immigrant family, who all returned to Scotland in 1849. The family settled in Edinburgh where Honeyman received his musical training, he later led the orchestra at the Leith Theatre, he also toured with a Scottish theatrical company. He wrote a column for the Peoples Friend magazine called violin queries where he answered correspondence and (for a small fee) valued violins. He published a great deal on the violin including compositions, some of which (according to the book) are still available. He named his house in Newport on Tay (situated on the south bank of the River Tay) Cremona ! Aside from crime writing, his name (honey and bees ?) along with the expertise regarding violins then surely it cannot be coincidental ? We know the opinion of Holmes on coincidences - so what would he have to say ?


Not aware of this one , but, after reading goodreads reviews I don't think I'll bother.

I enjoyed it but understood why modern readers would find it too slow. Disney (and the other Disney) was among those mid-century writers, like Charlotte Armstrong, Margaret Millar, who were strong on character and psychology rather than jump scares. Unfortunately some of these books are only obtainable in used paperback editions, when you can find them at all - I do wish Amazon would Kindle-ize them.


2 rate 5 stars (Lost Boy & Dunkirk), 1 rates 4 stars (The Crooked Man), 2 rate 3 1/2 stars (Silver Blaze & The Empty Slipper), 1 rates 3 stars (The Laughing Fisherman), 1 rates 2 1/2 stars (Dr Watson's Casebook), 3 rate 2 stars ( The Italian Art Dealer, My Ignoble Ancestress & The Closing) and 3 rate 1 star (By Any Other name, How I came to Meet SH & Thinking Machine), 1 rates 1/2 a star (Art in the Blood) and He Grew Up Reading SH rated zero stars.

(Millar was married to crime writer Kenneth Millar, who wrote under the name Ross MacDonald.


With all anthologies, readers will find some entries more interesting than others - my favorite entries were Kiyoshi Tanaka's "I Met Mr. Holmes in Tokyo", Evelyn A Herzog's "A Surfeit of Sleuths" and David L. Hammer's "Who Was That Gentleman?" - but all of the entries were "very well thumbed," (to quote Holmes in HOUN, and the illustrations - some I'd never seen - were very interesting.
I can't review it on Goodreads, because the book, long out of print, is evidently not in their database.

With all a..."
Can't you add the book or use the ISBN ?


0938501070
https://www.amazon.com/Studies-Scarle...

A satisfying collection of 20 short detective tales, an all round good read. 2 were especially good rating 5 stars each "The Walrus and the Spy" and "The Adventure of the Marie Antoinette Necklace : a case for Sherlock Holmes." The remainder scored 4 at 4 stars, 2 at 3 stars, 4 at 2 stars and the remainder at 1 star each.


As for my own reading, I went for a change of pace, an offbeat, self published crime novel , The Skin Game, set in Atlantic City. Better than a lot of books in the category by established publishing houses.

To be honest I only read the aforementioned title as it was pointed out to me as a modern-ish take on SH, as it was set in his retirement. It was a well padded out dreary read mainly as the story was weak and predictable and quite frankly boring. My main complaint was the age issue, I was taken aback by the author marrying him off to girl of an age to be his granddaughter - it makes it a sort of creepy sugar daddy story. I will not be reading more.
As for the Skin Game, isn't that an old movie or TV show ? I must look it up.







What exactly are MX books ?, text or strip cartoon style ?

Right now, MX seems to be up there with Titan books as the go-to publisher of Sherlock Holmes material, fiction and non fiction. They do novels and short story collections and I think they started up a young adult imprint. The books are in the usual formats - hardcover, paperback and kindle. The anthologies that I referred to have been published for some years the publisher working with editor and author David Marcum - the writers are all authors of Sherlock Holmes books, and who give back their portion of royalties to a charity that has to do with a school that was Conan Doyle's old home.
I have to say, they are great looking books, just a little pricey for me to buy the whole set in hardback (which is the format I prefer) - I think they have almost 40 volumes now.
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Several years after "Gentleman and Players" Harris did two more works at the same setting, so it's the first in a trilogy. I'm into the second book now.