Book review: The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
Holmes’ haughty generosity…
Book review:
The Adventures of
Sherlock Holmes
by Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle (1859-1930)
He’s the creator of crime fiction and that ace crimestopper, Sherlock Holmes
I’m re-reading some of Doyle’s “Sherlock Holmes” adventures, including several that are new to me…yes, yes, of course I read “The Five Orange Pips” again, doesn’t everyone?
This time I tried “The Adventure of Lady Frances Carfax” and “The Adventure of the Sussex Vampire” and a few others.
My first encounter with the exploits of Sherlock Holmes when I was too young to be entertained by anything but the action. With that constraint, “The Hound of the Baskervilles” was somewhat boring, and “The Adventure of the Six Napoleons” was simply pedestrian. The Complete Sherlock Holmes languished on my “To Read” list for years.
Now I am an older, more aesthetic fancier of the agile mind and the haughty generosity and the dimensioned humanity of Sherlock Holmes. Time after time, Holmes austerely allows Lestrade to claim a vaunted reputation that is too often boosted by the singular and covert prowess of Holmes himself. Holmes always takes the opportunity to be genteelly solicitous to the frightened widow. Despite his loveless bachelorhood, he is charmed by young lovers and easily condones their righteous excesses. He can be excited by discovery, and clap at each revelation, with the innocence of a child.
But still—the fabulous boarder at 221B Baker Street has no fear of the nastiest brute…Holmes will leap—leap!—onto the back of an escaping felon…he will defy the powerful and the villainous alike, in defense of the letter of the law and in obedience to humane justice…
Holmes is a good man, indeed.
His adventures are good reading, time after time.
p.s. the venerable Basil Rathbone probably is the best known of the on-screen Holmes personae, but Jeremy Brett is the best.
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Book review. Copyright © Richard Carl Subber 2018 All rights reserved.
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