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Sherlock Holmes

The Sign of Seven

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A stunning collection of seven brand-new mystery novellas featuring the redoubtable Sherlock Holmes and his chronicler Dr. John Watson
Eliminate the impossible...
Sherlock Holmes lives on in this extraordinary collection of brand-new novellas. Marvel as the master detective scours London's sewers to expose the killer of a mudlark; attends a deadly séance that may prove a man's guilt; visits a dark carnival with an unusual menu; solves the murder of an Egyptologist's butler; uncovers the shocking secret of a tobacco dealer; sets sail for America to investigate the death of a cult leader and settles an old score for his famous associate Inspector Lestrade.
The Sign of the Seven features seven brand-new mystery adventures written by masters of the Sherlock Holmes pastiche, including Andrew Lane, author of the Young Sherlock series; New York Times–bestselling author James Lovegrove; and Edgar Award nominee Lyndsay Faye.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 12, 2019
      This high-quality Sherlock Holmes pastiche anthology collects seven original novellas, most of which succeed in recreating the tone and personalities of Conan Doyle’s originals. The most memorable entry, Lyndsay Faye’s “Our Common Correspondent,” consists of a series of diary entries written by Inspector Lestrade, who emerges as a three-dimensional figure instead of a stereotyped Scotland Yarder either jealous of or amazed by the great detective. Lestrade must find a missing housemaid while dealing with an even ruder than usual Holmes, who’s unsettled by Watson’s impending nuptials. Faye blends an intriguing mystery with a plausible deepening of the relationships among Lestrade, Holmes, and Watson that could well have Sherlockians hoping for more cases recounted from the inspector’s viewpoint. Derrick Belanger offers the best straight pastiche, “The Adventure of the Heroic Tobacconist,” in which Holmes looks into the stabbing death of a Boer War veteran, despite a confession to the crime. Stuart Douglas, James Lovegrove, and David Stuart Davies also demonstrate their talents for traditional pastiche. Fans of the Baker Street sleuth won’t want to miss this one.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 15, 2022
      The eight Sherlockian short stories in this collection from Seabrooke (The Haunting of Swain’s Fancy) offer imaginative concepts weakly executed. In the title story, set early in Holmes and Watson’s association, a former army colleague of the doctor’s, Charley Lyndley, asks for his help, and Holmes tags along to probe a puzzle. Lyndley’s sister is bereft because her fiancé abruptly canceled their engagement, possibly after suffering some odd hallucinations. In “The Naval Man,” Holmes teams up with Poe’s Chevalier Auguste Dupin, who’s in London on the trail of the man he suspected of a murder decades earlier, a case based on a real-life New York City cause célèbre. At one point, Watson says of their arrival at Scotland Yard: “Inspector Lestrade met us at the entrance, his thin sallow face almost aglow with glee.” Such awkward prose matches thin characterizations and plots lacking the kind of clever turns that distinguish the work of the best pasticheurs. Those willing to accept less fidelity to the canon are most likely to enjoy these.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from September 5, 2022
      The 12 gifted contributors to Rosenstock’s outstanding second all-original anthology (after 2019’s Sherlock Holmes: The Sign of Seven) each depict a different chapter in Holmes’s life. Standouts include the opener, Stuart Douglas’s “The Adventure of the Spiritualist Detective,” set so early in Holmes and Watson’s relationship that the doctor is having second thoughts about continuing to share their Baker Street rooms. Those doubts are triggered by Holmes’s illogical acceptance of a female client who complains that a male stranger has accessed her home, leaving behind a partially drunk bottle of beer and the odor of cooked kippers. The entries proceed chronologically from there. The last selection, Eric Brown’s “Peril at Carroway House,” finds a wheelchair-using Holmes abandoning retirement in Sussex in 1926 and tackling a case featuring Irene Adler’s daughter. Some of the best tales are particularly faithful to the originals, such as David Marcum’s “The Tragic Affair at the Millennium Manor” and Philip Purser-Hallard’s “The Elementary Problem.” Sherlockians will enjoy watching the beloved detective’s character evolve over the years.

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  • English

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