HarperCollins is proud to present its incredible range of best-loved, essential classics. Originally published in 1903-1904, The Return of Sherlock Holmes is the thirteen-story collection of one of the greatest-ever fictional detectives. Three years after the supposed death of Sherlock Holmes and his archenemy Professor Moriarty in the torrent of Reichenbach Falls, Holmes makes a disguised … disguised reappearance to Baker Street and his good friend Dr Watson.
Featuring one of Holmes’ greatest adversaries, Charles Augustus Milverton, as well as trademark astute logic, forensic science, murder, crytograms and magic, this collection retains all the hallmark brilliance of Arthur Conan Doyle’s best work.
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This is from The Adventure of Abbey Grange, my favourite story in The Return of Sherlock Holmes.
Although I’ve read a few of Holmes’s stories and always enjoyed them, I may have never read the entire book if not for a readalong with my readers’ group. And once more I really really enjoyed it.
This collection surprised me. I was surprised that it was so varied. The stories never followed the exact same scheme. There was always a new idea, a new perspective on Holmes, his methods or his character.
Most of the stories were cleverly constructed and the high quality of the entire collection also surprised me, since anthologies normally tend to be uneven on this side. Instead I find that I love most of the stories, with only one or two exceptions. And let me tell you that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle is a hell of a storyteller.
But what surprised me the most was Sherlock Holmes himself.
The popular image we have of him, as mostly cinema and tv has given us, is of a cold thinker. A detached man who often has difficulties relating to other human beings. An extravagant difficult to understand, more interested in the puzzle than in the people involved in it.
I discovered that this is not the case with the original stories. Holmes is indeed describes as an uncommon man, but he is also a gentle man as well as a gentleman. He cares and symphatises with the victims and despises the criminals. He has a sense of humour. And though he does have his own moral code, he always uses it to further what he believes to be justice, even when that justice would hardly be supported by the law.
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“No, I couldn’t do it, Watson. Once that warrant was made out nothing of earth would save him. Once or twice in my career I felt that I have done more real harm by my discovery of the criminal than ever he had done by his crime. I have learned caution now, and I had rather play tricks with the law of England than with my own conscience.”
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I was also quite surprised by the treatment of women. Sure, they are always presented in their domestic incarnation, as mothers, more often as wives or soon-to-be wives. But as Victorian women, I find them to have quite an agenda. They often act on their own accord, sometimes unbeknownst to the man they answer to. Although they are never the villain, they are sometimes the criminal, which did surprise me. And sometimes, as in this short story, controversial issues are touched – in this case, domestic violence. I really didn’t expect this.
I was fascinated with the Victorian world, so different from ours. And still not quite. Holmes communicates mostly by telegram, and still telegrams are so fast that they normally arrive within hours, so to be effective substitute of the telephone. He travels a lot, mostly by public transportation. I never had the feeling that he was hindered in any way by a world that we are normally inclined to think constricting and slow in comparison to ours.
It was a very enjoyable, surprising read.