Sherlock Holmes and the Man from Hell explained

Sherlock Holmes and the Man from Hell
Author:Barrie Roberts
Language:English
Genre:Mystery novels
Publisher:Constable & Co.
Release Date:1997
Media Type:Print
Pages:208
Isbn:0-09-477090-5
Isbn Note:(first paperback edition)

Sherlock Holmes and the Man from Hell is a 1997 Sherlock Holmes pastiche novel by Barrie Roberts.[1] A key character in the story, Lord Backwater, is first mentioned in the short story, "The Noble Bachelor,", also by Holmes creator Arthur Conan Doyle.

Plot

Philanthropist Lord Backwater is found dead on his property. The police surmise that Backwater came upon some poachers which led to his murder. Holmes discounts this solution and undertakes his own investigation which leads to a hidden history of Backwater's time spent in a prison settlement on Van Diemen's Land.[1]

Reissue

Titan Books reprinted the book in 2010, as part of its Further Adventures series, which collects a number of noted Holmesian pastiches.

Reception

Reviews of Sherlock Holmes and the Man from Hell have been largely positive.[2] [3] Publishers Weekly claimed that Roberts' writing was a successful "melding the brilliant thinker and the man of action".[4]

Roger Johnson writing for the Sherlock Holmes Society of London stated that Roberts "has done his homework thoroughly"[1] and "writes in a very acceptable simulacrum of Watson’s style".[1] When Titan Books reissued the book, Lenny Picker called it a "classic pastiche".[5]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.sherlock-holmes.org.uk/pdf/DM174.PDF The District Messenger, no. 174 7 November 1997
  2. Web site: The Further Adventures of Sherlock Holmes: The Man from Hell by Barrie Roberts . 5 April 2011 . Fantasy Book Review .
  3. Web site: The Further Adventures of Sherlock Holmes: The Man From Hell . 5 April 2011 . .
  4. Web site: Sherlock Holmes and the Crosby Murder . 5 April 2011 . .
  5. The Return of Sherlock Holmes Is it inevitable, my dear Watson? . Lenny Picker . . 257 . 3 . 5 April 2011 .