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Indlæser... The Annotated Sherlock Holmes (original 1967; udgave 1975)af Arthur Conan Doyle
Work InformationThe Annotated Sherlock Holmes (2-Volume Set) af Arthur Conan Doyle (1967)
![]() Der er ingen diskussionstråde på Snak om denne bog. I have been an avid Sherlock Holmes enthusiast since I started reading the stories at the age of nine. Ten years ago, I had the opportunity to acquire a used copy of "The Annotated Sherlock Holmes." What a disappointment! The editor chose to arrange the individual works in a chronology of his own devising, and by deviating from the established arrangement of the works, makes it very difficult to find a given story. And most of the "annotations" detract from the stories -- there is very little of significance added. I have awarded this enormous book a single star and am donating my boxed set to the public library. ingen anmeldelser | tilføj en anmeldelse
IndeholderThe "Gloria Scott" (short story) af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) The Musgrave Ritual (short story) af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) En studie i rødt af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) The Resident Patient (short story) af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) The Reigate Squires (short story) af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) A Scandal in Bohemia af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) The Man with the Twisted Lip [short story] af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) The Five Orange Pips (short story) af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) A Case of Identity (short story) af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) The Red-Headed League (short story) af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) The Adventure of the Dying Detective af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) Frygtens dal af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) The Yellow Face (short story) af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) The Greek Interpreter (short story) af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) De fires tegn af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) Baskervilles hund af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) The Boscombe Valley Mystery (short story) af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) The Stockbroker's Clerk (short story) af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) The Naval Treaty (short story) af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) The Cardboard Box (short story) af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) The Crooked Man (short story) af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) The Adventure of Wisteria Lodge (short story) af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) Silver Blaze (short story) af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) The Final Problem (short story) af Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) The Adventure of the Empty House (short story) af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) The Adventure of Black Peter (short story) af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) The Adventure of the Devil's Foot af Arthur Conan Doyle (indirekte) Notable Lists
Here, in two volumes, is every word that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1859-1930) ever wrote about the adventures of the detective and the doctor... fifty-six short stories and four complete novels, arranged chronologically from Holmes's first case, in 1874, when he was a university student, to his signal service to the British Empire in the opening days of the First World War. No library descriptions found. |
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![]() GenrerMelvil Decimal System (DDC)823.8Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Victorian period 1837-1900LC-klassificeringVurderingGennemsnit:![]()
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Baring-Gould didn't so much as introduce the annotated volumes and write a short but thorough biography of not only Conan Doyle, but Sherlock, Watson (to a lesser extent) and several chapters of pure out-and-out speculation of exactly where 221B Baker Street was, the layout of the rooms (was Watson on the third floor, or the second?; did Sherlock have 2 doors out of his bedroom?), and what kinds of furniture might or might not have been there. His cited sources include all the great 'scholars' of Sherlock Holmes: Morely, Starr, etc. and I have to say, these men needed more fresh air.
I'm sort of kidding, but sort of not - reading the annotations is fascinating. These men treat Holmes as though he were not only a real life historical figure, but a static one. The dichotomy is surreal. For example, Baring-Gould discusses the furniture in the flat, and the it seems that if Holmes had been a real person, these men (and yes, they're all almost without exception, men) expected him to have never, ever changed or moved any of the furniture.
Anyway, I thoroughly enjoyed reading The Blue Carbuncle, as I always do, though the annotations included quite a few snide comments by one Magistrate S. Tupper Bigelow, who impressed me as a complete prat, who needed to be reminded it's a story and even Conan Doyle was allowed to take creative liberties. There was also a whole discussion on whether or not Doyle intended to use the word commute and whether or not it implied Holmes had royal blood. That made me roll my eyes and cry 'oh, horse sh*t' loud enough to make MT laugh. Overall though, the rest of the annotations were thoroughly interesting, if not always informative, and they gave me a deeper context for enjoying a story that's already a firm favorite of mine. (