Moonstone Books is proud to present this original anthology featuring never before seen tales of the world's first consulting detective, Mr. Sherlock Holmes! Holmes teams up with some of the most colorful characters of history: โข Arsene Lupin โข Lawrence of Arabia โข Calamity Jane โข Sexton
Sherlock Holmes Crossover Casebook
โ Scribed by Hopkins, Howard (editor)
- Book ID
- 108508640
- Publisher
- Moonstone
- Year
- 2012
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 216 KB
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Moonstone Books is proud to present this original anthology featuring never before seen tales of the world's first consulting detective, Mr. Sherlock Holmes!
Holmes teams up with some of the most colorful characters of history:
โข Arsene Lupin
โข Lawrence of Arabia
โข Calamity Jane
โข Sexton Blake
โข Harry Houdini
โข The Thinking Machine
โข Dr. Thorndkye
โข Aleister Crowley
โข Colonel Savage
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"Sherlock Holmes in the Lost World" (written by Martin Powell) - During World War I, when Professor Challenger vanishes and with him his secret formula for a super metal alloy which could turn the tides of war in Britain's favor, the Prime Minister deploys a reluctant and retired Holmes to the fabulous Lost World. Holmes and Watson are accompanied by Challenger's exceptional daughter and by the legendary adventurer, Lord John Roxton, who provides sharpshooting and guide duties.
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"The Scion of Fear" (written by Christopher Sequeira) - The follow-up to THE SIGN OF FOUR!
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"The Petrifying Well" (by Martin Gately) - Young Ned Lawrence - years before he would become "Lawrence of Arabia" - persuades Holmes to look into the sudden, mysterious death of his best friend's brother.
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"The Adventure of the Fallen Stone" (by Win Scott Eckert) - Someone's been brushing up on Philip Jos? Farmer's Wold Newton family tree. Heavily leaning on Doyle's "His Last Bow" and Farmer's THE ADVENTURE OF THE PEERLESS PEER, this one has Holmes and Watson embarking on an enterprise which sets them once more on the trail of the slippery German agent Von Bork. Fans of obscure detective fiction may wet themselves: Holmes and Watson are accompanied by Sexton Blake, Harry Dickson (alias the "American Sherlock Holmes"), and Isis Vanderhoek, enigmatic daughter of Sax Rohmer's Dream Detective Moris Klaw.
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"The Secret of Grant's Tomb" (by Joe Gentile) - In London, Professor Van Dusen's right hand man, Hutchinson Hatch, enlists Sherlock Holmes in locating the missing Thinking Machine.
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"The Haunted Manor" (by Howard Hopkins) - High brow detection meets low comedy. A malodorous, inebriated and obnoxious Calamity Jane drops in on 221B Baker Street and claims to be as great a detective as Sherlock Holmes. Her sleuthing skills are put to the test when Holmes takes on a case involving ghosts and a prophesied death. It's pretty amusing to see Calamity Jane coming on to both Holmes and Watson, much to their genteel alarm. But does she solve the case before Holmes does?
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"The Adventure of the Sinister Chinaman" (by Barbara Hambly) - This is my absolute favorite in this anthology, featuring an inspired team-up that had my jaw dropping once I sussed out who Professor Diggs was. When a Chinese magician's stage act results in the disappearance of a little girl, Holmes and Watson race to locate her. They're abetted by Professor Diggs, an amiable balloonist and prestidigitator whom some have labeled a madman and a charlatan.
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"The Folly of Flight" (by Matthew P. Mayo) - Maurice Leblanc's notorious gentleman burglar, Ars?ne Lupin, witnesses a murder and wires a plea for Sherlock Holmes' presence. A satisfactory thriller, although it could've done with more cat and mouse games between Holmes and Lupin.
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"Sherlock Holmes and the Other Eye" (by Richard Dean Starr) - When the "Wickedest Man Alive," the notorious occultist Aleister Crowley, is sought by Scotland Yard and by the Pinkerton Agency
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
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The last twelve stories written about Holmes and Watson, these tales reflect the disillusioned world of the 1920s in which they were written. Some of the sharpest turns of wit in English literature are contrasted by dark images of psychological tragedy, suicide, and incest in a collection of tales t
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