Complete Sherlock Holmes, Volume II (Barnes & Noble Classics Series) by Arthur Conan Doyle, Kyle Freeman

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  • Pub. Date: June 2009
  • Sales Rank: 70,289

    Reader Rating: (13 ratings)

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: June 2009
    • Publisher: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • Sales Rank: 70,289

    Synopsis

    The Complete Sherlock Holmes comprises four novels and fifty-six short stories revolving around the world’s most popular and influential fictional detective—the eccentric, arrogant, and ingenious Sherlock Holmes. He and his trusted friend, Dr. Watson, step from Holmes’s comfortable quarters at 221b Baker Street into the swirling fog of Victorian London to combine detailed observation and vast knowledge with brilliant deduction. Inevitably, Holmes rescues the innocent, confounds the guilty, and solves the most perplexing puzzles known to literature.

    Volume II of The Complete Sherlock Holmes begins with The Return of Sherlock Holmes. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, tired of writing about Holmes, had killed him off at the end of “The Final Problem,” the last tale in The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes (found in Volume I of The Complete Sherlock Holmes). Public demand for new Holmes stories was so great, however, that Conan Doyle eventually resurrected him. The first story in The Return, “The Adventure of the Empty House,” features Conan Doyle’s infamously inventive explanation of how Holmes escaped what seemed like certain death.

    This volume also includes two other collections of Holmes stories, His Last Bow and The Case Book of Sherlock Holmes; Conan Doyle’s final full-length Holmes novel, The Valley of Fear; a pair of parodies, “The Field Bazaar” and “How Watson Learned the Trick”; and two essays about the “private life” of the beloved sleuth.


    Introduction and Notes by Kyle Freeman
    “What sort of person dedicates himself to catching people who commit crimes? We don’t need a psychiatrist’s shingle to conclude that someone who feels this need must have suffered some sort of injustice as a child. As we can never know what this sad event was, we can only speculate, and many have. Whatever it was, it has made Holmes a moralist. It is not the law that he upholds, but his own conception of justice.” —from the Introduction by Kyle Freeman

    A Sherlock Holmes enthusiast for many years, Kyle Freeman earned two graduate degrees in English literature from Columbia University, where his major was twentieth-century British literature. He has seen just about all the Holmes movies of the last sixty years, as well as the television series with Jeremy Brett. Now working as a computer consultant, he constantly puts into practice Sherlock Holmes’s famous statement—“Eliminate all other factors, and the one which remains, however improbable, must be the truth.”


    Sir Arthur Conan Doyle published the first Holmes story, A Study in Scarlet, in 1887, and the popularity of the famed sleuth singularly determined the author’s enduring legacy. But in addition to his mysteries, nonfiction, and historical works, Doyle enjoyed many adventures of his own. In 1900 he traveled to South Africa as a war-time physician in Cape Town; his treatise on the Boer War earned him a knighthood in 1902. During World War I, Conan Doyle served as a war correspondent. And from 1920 until his death in 1930, the author wrote, traveled, and lectured to promote his belief in spiritualism.

    Annotation

    The Barnes & Noble Classics series offers readers quality editions of enduring works at affordable prices.

    Library Journal

    Like Volume 1 (Classic Returns, LJ 10/1/03, p. 123), this is a bargain. It gathers short story collections-The Return of Sherlock Holmes, His Last Bow, and The Case Book of Sherlock Holmes-plus the novella The Valley of Fear, along with two Conan Doyle essays and scholarly notes. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

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    Biography

    Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was both a doctor and a believer in spirits, which may partly explain why his Sherlock Holmes is one of literature's most beloved detectives: Holmes always approaches his cases with the gentility and logic of a scientist, but the stories are suffused with an aura of the supernatural. Narrated by devoted assistant Dr. John H. Watson, Holmes's adventures were so addictive that fans protested the master deducer's "death" in 1893 and Doyle had to resurrect him.

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    Customer Reviews

    • Reader Rating:
    • Ratings: 13Reviews: 2

    Love itby Hawks1800

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    May 13, 2009: I love sherlock homes and he has very good stories

    A reviewerby Anonymous

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    January 03, 2008: When i first had to read this book, i had the notion that it was some old boring book but it is NOT!!! The adventures in the book are captivating. This book is truly worth the read. It is so awesome! Be not afraid of the length because it is composed of only short stories.