Reading the Classics discussion

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The Return of Sherlock Holmes
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The Return of Sherlock Holmes - Sept 12 � Oct 6
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I have started reading this - read the first 4 stories so far. Funny thing is that I have recently started watching repeats of the Jeremy Brett dramatizations on my local PBS channel and all of the episodes of the last few weeks have been from this collection.

I have started reading this - read the first 4 stories so far. Funny thing is that I have recently started wa..."
I know, you reminded me it was time, so I went ahead and started it. I should be able to start it later today. :)

This just seemed like the other bookend to the Moriarty story from "Adventures." It's merely a way to introduce Holmes back into the world. Ok, there was a murder on the side, but that didn't really grab my attention a whole lot and I didn't really follow how it related to everything else. It was still more enjoyable than "The Final Problem" though, as the interaction between Watson and Holmes was just more jovial in general.
The Norwood Builder
Here is a fun, Holmes-esque locked room mystery. It was a fairly cheery story to read, even though slightly predictable. I think the thing I found most chilling was when the old man kept saying it was "just a joke," and I wanted to strangle him myself. How vile!

"The Norwood Builder" - I enjoyed seeing Holmes when he was almost despondent believing that he could not find facts to support his instincts about the case. Of course in the end the criminal overplayed his hand and Holmes solved the criminal investigation.
"The Dancing Men" - Interesting that Holmes dropped the ball and arrived too late. We are so used to him being there just in time so that no crime occurs(if he gets the case ahead of time). Of course he still solves the mystery.


Oh, no I don't think you can say that!!! Some of his best characters have come from The USA! Including Irene Adler - I know she's a villain, but a beautiful, talented and brilliant one and the only woman ever to gain Holmes' respect. Plus characters like Sir Henry Baskerville - very likeable, very brave and very generous.
I know there was controversy about his depiction of the Mormons but I don't think that was anti-Americanism per se.

I've been doing all of these on audio and it's been interesting hearing different narrators do the voices when they're changing between and English and American accent. Some I hardly notice but there were a couple narrators that were rather jarring. Which was the story that had an actual cowboy? The accent for him really threw me...


I've been listening to various versions from the library on Overdrive and OneClick, depending on which one is available, so it's been different narrators.

The Six Napoleons
I thought this one was rather fun. It's like a treasure hunt working backwards to a murder. I followed Holmes' train of thought as far as that the man was looking for something, but of course there were no clues given as to WHAT he was looking for, so there was no way for the reader to solve that particular aspect of the mystery. It was a rather fun little obstacle course of a mystery.
I loved how Lestrade kept asking questions about how Holmes would go about finding out the truth just like a child would ask for confirmation that he was doing a project correctly. He just sounded like a little boy seeking approval, then taking credit for it when Holmes gently steered him in the right direction. It's adorable, but only because we can tell that Holmes is not in the least bothered by this and does not feel slighted.
Is it just me, or does this particular collection seem to have more character development than earlier ones? Watson shares some of his observations as to the humanity of Holmes, what it is that moves and touches him about life. I don't recall any of that kind of observation before, just lots of "Holmes worship" because of his genius.


"The Priory School" - A really enjoyable read. I would love to see those horseshoes.
"Black Peter" - A good story but I missed seeing much of Holmes deductive processes. It was mostly Hopkins work although of course Holmes was right in the end.
"Charles Augustus Milverton" - A most enjoyable little tale. Watson and Holmes turn to a life of crime.

From what I have been able to find out, the US and the UK were the last countries to adopt metrication. Wikipedia has a good article on metrication in the UK. I think that probably the measurements are written the same in British and American versions.

The Three Students
Well this was a different type of case. Solving a case of good old fashioned cheating! It was cute. :)

Certainly at the time these were written, England was using inches, miles, even furlongs!
And Alana - your problem with italics is most likely caused by not having the "/i" inside the <> after the story title. Sorry if this is unclear but check the "(some html is ok)" link on the top right of the comment box for a better example.


Phil's comment rings true in the book. In "The Adventure of the Missing Three-Quarter" the description of Mr. Overton is of "an enormous young man, sixteen stone of solid bone and muscle".

I didn't know that about the measurements, I guess I thought that makes and such were a fairly new invention and that metric was the more common way of dOing it (and it certainly makes more sense! )

"Three Students" - I liked the story but perhaps someone can tell me why Watson said details identifying the college would be injudicious to use. In the next paragraph he said Soames was tutor at the College of St. Luke's. This seems like an identifier to me.

"The Golden Pince-Nez" - Not my favorite story. Seemed a bit far-fetched. However, if anyone had it figured out before the end I applaud them.
"The Missing Three-Quarter" - Holmes certainly misjudged the man he considered his adversary in this story.
Alana noted his character development in this series of stories, his humanity. I noticed some mention of his fallibility in some of these stories. Also, in the last two stories - "Abbey Grange" and "The Second Stain" Holmes has shown compassion to the perpetrators of the "crimes". Possibly this is more character development. He has realized that the guilty parties did the wrong things for the right reasons and that they would be unlikely to reoffend.

The Dancing Men
I found this one rather obvious, though I enjoyed seeing Holmes figure out the code. Nothing too shocking in the story, though.
The Solitary Cyclist
I found this rather bizarre. It seemed so old-fashioned, even for a time of horse and buggy. He was going to force her to marry him? It sounds so... I don't know, Olyve Oyl and what's his name from Popeye, or something. Just kind of cartoonish, somehow.
The Priory School
I found this to be one of the better ones, too be honest. I couldn't quite follow how he came up with his ideas, but his working it out along the bicycle trail was fascinating.
Charles Augustus Milverton
Well, we rarely see Holmes so emotionally galled by someone. I liked seeing them turn into the culprits for a change. What an exciting chase scene!

As we work through these, I'm finding that the novels are much more enjoyable and the short stories - because they ask follow essentially the same formula - have now all blurred into one in my memory.
However, I thought the dismissal of the Moriarty tale was done too quickly, as was the removal of Watson's wife.
And what's with sending Holmes off into retirement (again) farming bees?

An...interesting tale. I too, found it rather far-fetched, though at least a little different. I did like the way he managed to make her create her own footprints, but noticing that there were books in front of all the bookshelves but one? O, and they happen to be from Russia? Just weird.
The Missing Three-Quarter
I actually liked this one. It was a mystery, I suppose, but certainly not of the usual kind. I really felt for the poor man in the end. What a sad tale.
The Abbey Grange
Again, we see Holmes' humanity, though I'm not sure I liked how he went about the ending. But, in that day, what WAS the solution to a sticky situation like that? There weren't places for battered women to go and that man would have ruled her with an iron fist all of his days. I don't think there's an easy answer to that one.
(I went ahead and opened the thread, as I believe it's supposed to have started already. I'm excited to continue on his adventures!)