Showing posts with label Sherlock Holmes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sherlock Holmes. Show all posts

Saturday, November 13, 2021

Sherlock Holmes: The Death and Life (2009) [Audio Drama]. *** and a 1\2 out of *****

 

 Text © Ahmed Khalifa. 2021.

Ahmed Khalifa is a filmmaker and novelist. He is the writer/director of several short films and a feature, which was released on Netflix, and the author of a number of novels and short stories, including the YA horror novel, Beware The Stranger, available on Amazon. Find him on Twitter @AFKhalifa and on Facebook @Dark.Fantastic.AK·Writer

Monday, November 1, 2021

New episode of The Dark Fantastic Podcast, featuring Sherlock Holmes Author/Expert, David Stuart Davies

In this new episode:
  • A.K. talks about the outcry against classic literature, and questions why classic "genre" fiction isn't considered "fine" literature.
  • An interview with Sherlock Holmes expert and best-selling author/editor David Stuart Davies (Sherlock Holmes: The Tangled Skein and Sherlock Holmes: Revenge from The Grave [2022]).
  • Revisiting INNER SANCTUM (1948).

  • Easter Egg: a new short story.

Listen to the episode here:

Listen to "Episode 3: Sherlock Holmes Returns, and A Defense of "Genre". Guest: David Stuart Davies" on Spreaker.

Wednesday, October 27, 2021

Book review: A Sherlock Holmes Double-Bill: THE TANGLED SKEIN vs. THE ITALIAN SECRETARY

© Wordsworth

Arthur Conan Doyle's creation of sleuth extraordinaire Sherlock Holmes revolutionized detective fiction and continues to do so to this day. I doubt there is a single writer of crime or detective fiction who hasn't read some or all of the work of Doyle and has been influenced by it, by the clinical attention to detail, the strong sense of atmosphere, the sharp dialogue, and above all, the sense of fun.

Although Doyle had retired Holmes a long while before the author's own death, writers continue to churn out pastiches; some are good, some are bad and some are brilliant. The Tangled Skein and The Italian Secretary fall somewhere between good and brilliant.

The Tangled Skein by David Stuart Davies focuses on Sherlock Holmes facing the lord of the undead himself, Dracula. And although the premise sounds ludicrous and could even be considered an insult to Doyle's work, the resulting book is neither. Author and Holmes expert David Stuart Davies captures Doyle's tone and style almost perfectly and weaves a tale full of action and mood. It is a well-told tale that stays true to the mythos and features dialogue that could have been written by the master himself. Where the book falters a bit is in the mystery aspect. In trying to combine the mythologies of both Doyle and Bram Stoker's work, Davies veers more towards the plotting style of Stoker, with more action than intrigue. Although that makes it a rousing thriller , full of atmosphere and foreboding, it also makes it a not very good mystery. But there is an added bonus here. Davies ingeniously adds the very neat twist of making this story a direct sequel to The Hound of the Baskervilles. Something that avid Holmes readers will find delightful. I did.

Monday, January 4, 2016

Book Review: THE SHADOW OF REICHENBACH FALLS by John R. King

Sherlock Holmes pastiches are a dime-a-dozen, with authors placing Holmes in the midst of investigations dealing with everything from Lovecraftian monsters, to vampires, to demons, to time travel. John R. King's The Shadow of Reichenbach Falls, on the other hand, teams Holmes up with none other than Thomas Carnacki, Ghost Finder.

You don't know who Carnacki is? Well, if you're a fan of Sherlock Holmes and his ilk, you might have heard about him. The creation of author William Hope Hodgson (1877-1918), Thomas Carnacki was featured in nine stories by Hodgson, all dealing with Carnacki's investigations into supernatural, or seemingly supernatural, occurrences. The Carnacki stories are not as well known as Holmes's tales of meticulous deduction, but hardcore fans of weird fiction know about them, mainly because of how strange and compelling these stories are.

In The Shadow of Reichenbach Falls, John R. King (the author of more than twenty novels under the name J. Robert King) attempts to write a Holmes pastiche set between the stories The Final Problem and The Adventure of The Empty House, and an origin story for Thomas Carnacki.

The story centers on Carnacki, along with Professor Moriarity's Daughter, Anne, rescuing Holmes from certain death, only to discover that Holmes has no memory of who he is. Meanwhile, Moriarity, who is very much alive, is after Holmes, intending to kill him for ruining his empire of crime. Add to that demons, crazy doctors, Jack The Ripper, and botched exorcism, and you get The Shadow of Reichenbach Falls.

So does the whole thing work? Mostly, yes. King's writing is clean and energetic. His characters come to life on the page, and the middle section, written in the form of Professor Moriarity's diaries, is nothing short of riveting. But the whole plot doesn't gel with Arthur Conan Doyle's tales, or his style, for that matter; and fans of Carnacki will be slightly disappointed by King's refusal to delve deeper into the ghost hunter's past (although he does explain how Carnacki came upon his "Electric Pentacle").

Overall, this is an entertaining ride, full of interesting ideas. But as far as Holmes pastiches go, this might be too fantastical for some readers.

Text © Ahmed Khalifa. 2013 - 2015. (Originally published on Bitlanders)

Wednesday, December 30, 2015

Review: MR. HOLMES (2015)

Original Theatrical Poster
This is a tough film to review. On the one hand, Mr. Holmes (2015) is an elegant, touching film, with a mesmerizing performance by Ian McKellen as an elderly Sherlock Holmes. On the other hand, for Holmes buffs, like myself, this is a film that tries to humanize Holmes, by portraying him in a sad, tragic light, as a lonely, ailing old man with nothing to show for his life. This is not the fate we want for the greatest detective who ever lived, is it? 

It's also a Holmes film with no real central mystery or puzzle to intrigue us, as director Bill Condon, following a script by Jeffrey Hatcher (based on Mitch Cullins' novel A Slight Trick of The Mind), is more interested in the psychology of Holmes and the surrounding characters than detection and intrigue. And while the surrounding characters are somewhat interesting, they aren't fascinating enough to hold the film together. So what we are left with is watching a regretful, senile Holmes try to remember the details of his last case, the reason he chose to live in exile, tending to his bees, with only a resentful housekeeper (Laura Linney in an annoying performance) and her young son for company.

Still, Mr. Holmes is a pleasant enough couple of hours. It's a classy, polished film, with enough highlights to make it worthwhile. But Holmes aficionados, beware. This is not the Holmes you know. This is Holmes as seen through a realistic lens; not a larger than life super-sleuth, but a man regretfully facing a life unfulfilled. It's an elegiac, bittersweet portrayal that's not for everyone.

Text © Ahmed Khalifa. 2015.