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Sherlock Holmes Society of London reviews Sherlock Holmes On The Air

Posted by Steve Emecz on

"one of the most prolific and intelligent writers in the field" In the current edition of the Sherlock Holmes Society of London newsletter appears the review of Matthew Elliot's collection of radio play on Sherlock Holmes. "Sherlock Holmes first appeared on radio eighty-one years ago, and audio dramas far outnumber television plays or films. The Further Adventures on BBC Radio 4 appears to have finished, but a series of the same name continues in America. Jim French’s production The Further Adventures of Sherlock Holmes began syndication in 1998. M J Elliott contributed his first script in 2003 and is now one of the most prolific and...

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Sherlock Holmes Society of London reviews An Entirely New Country

Posted by Steve Emecz on

When his last book won the 2011 Howlett Award (Shelock Holmes Book of The Year) it was always going to be tough for Alistair Duncan to meet expectations with his next one. Thankfully he does that, and more, in arguably one of the best books ever written on Conan Doyle. An Entirely New Country went down so well with co-creator of BBC's Sherlock, Mark Gatiss that he agreed to provide the foreword.The Sherlock Holmes Society of London has now reviewed the book in their latest newsletter and they agree to the importance of the book. Holmes fans have fed back...

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NPLH video review of The Lost Stories of Sherlock Holmes from Tony Reynolds

Posted by Steve Emecz on

The most popular No Place Like Holmes video review ever. Ross K himself comments on the book "Definitely one of my favourites to date".   [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rZ32TB1wTM4?rel=0] The Lost Stories of Sherlock Holmes are available from all good bookstores worldwide, on Amazon, Amazon Kindle, Kobo Books and iBooks (iPad/iPhone).

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Bookbag reviews Sherlock Holmes and The Lyme Regis Legacy

Posted by Steve Emecz on

"I read this just after David Ruffle's first book on Holmes, and it has a similar structure - a main novella, followed by a series of short stories. It's markedly different in some ways though, notably in the portrayal of Watson having improved somewhat and the plot of the title story being stronger. Ruffle's Holmes is still a delight to read, with the author capturing him especially well, while the faithful Lestrade is pleasingly close to his established character. Ruffle's Watson admits that it's 'more or less a chase' with little actual detective work to be done, but taken for what it...

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Bookbag Reviews My Dear Watson - a novel of Sherlock Holmes

Posted by Steve Emecz on

"I started this book after an evening out, thinking I would just read a page or two to help me sleep... two hours later I’d read all of it. Margaret Park Bridges knows how to give a reader a good time. Each page beckons you hypnotically towards the next. It’s suspense filled, interesting, fun and, indeed funny to the point of farce on a couple of occasions." Four star reviews from independent bookstore review site The Bookbag are to be treasured as they don't come around too often. My Dear Watson gets a great review - a few minor gripes...

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