A Study in Sherlock: Stories inspired by the Homes Canon releases on the 25th this month. It's edited by Laurie R King and Leslie Klinger, and includes contributions from Neil Gaiman (even if it's the same old "A Study in Emerald", how lovely a study that is!) and other famous authors. (Including Jacqueline Winspear, whom I am quite interested to see here.)
Here is a very lack-lustre interview with one of the contributors, Lee Child copy/pasted from the Amazon.com preorder page.
Why do you think you were asked to contribute to this book?
Because over the years Les Klinger and Laurie King discovered I'm a closet--but hopelessly amateur--Sherlockian, I suppose.
Why did you want to do it?
Because of the other folks already committed--I was hoping some credibility would rub off on me.
How much research did you do for your story "The Bone-Headed League"? Did you read Sherlockian literature? Or just the original story "The Red-Headed League"?
I read the original story again, to refresh my memory for the names I needed to know ... and then I read a commentary by some guy called Klinger for background.
Did writing this story have any effect on your feelings about the Sherlock Holmes Canon?
It reminded me that old Conan Doyle got away with the kind of fudges and inexactitudes we'd be slaughtered for today.
Are you done with Sherlock Holmes? Or can we expect more of this sort in the future?
No writer in my genre will ever be done with Holmes. Just not possible. Whether or not I do more depends whether I get asked again.
Here is a very lack-lustre interview with one of the contributors, Lee Child copy/pasted from the Amazon.com preorder page.
Why do you think you were asked to contribute to this book?
Because over the years Les Klinger and Laurie King discovered I'm a closet--but hopelessly amateur--Sherlockian, I suppose.
Why did you want to do it?
Because of the other folks already committed--I was hoping some credibility would rub off on me.
How much research did you do for your story "The Bone-Headed League"? Did you read Sherlockian literature? Or just the original story "The Red-Headed League"?
I read the original story again, to refresh my memory for the names I needed to know ... and then I read a commentary by some guy called Klinger for background.
Did writing this story have any effect on your feelings about the Sherlock Holmes Canon?
It reminded me that old Conan Doyle got away with the kind of fudges and inexactitudes we'd be slaughtered for today.
Are you done with Sherlock Holmes? Or can we expect more of this sort in the future?
No writer in my genre will ever be done with Holmes. Just not possible. Whether or not I do more depends whether I get asked again.
Roh
A Study in Sherlock.
19/10/2011 11:14:14 PM
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I have been reading the new annoted sherlock holmes and decided he is quite a decent chap. *NM*
21/10/2011 03:53:08 AM
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