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Sherlock Holmes Mystery Magazine #10

Arthur Conan Doyle




  Table of Contents

  COPYRIGHT INFORMATION

  CARTOON, by Marc Bilgrey

  FROM WATSON’S SCRAPBOOK

  CARTOON, by Basil Chap

  SCREEN OF THE CRIME, by Lenny Picker

  ASK MRS HUDSON, by Mrs Martha Hudson

  ELDRITCH, MY DEAR WATSON, by Darrell Schweitzer

  SHERLOCK HOLMES AND SCIENCE FICTION, by Amy H. Sturgis

  THE ADVENTURE OF THE DOCKLANDS APPARITION, by Mark Wardecker

  THE PROBLEM OF THE THREE EDWARDIAN PENNIES, by Peter Cannon

  THE CURSE OF EDWIN BOOTH, by Carole Buggé

  FOOL’S GOLD, by Martin Rosenstock

  THE ADVENTURE OF THE LUNATICS’S BALL, by Adam Beau McFarlane

  MUSE WITH SEVEN PERCENT, by Christian Endres

  SIMPLICITY ITSELF, by Zack Wentz

  THE BUTLER DID IT, by Herschel Cozine

  THE CASE OF THE TARLETON MURDERS, by Jack Grochot

  THE FIELD BAZAAR, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

  IF YOU ENJOYED THIS EBOOK...

  COPYRIGHT INFORMATION

  Sherlock Holmes Mystery Magazine #10 (Vol. 4, No. 2) is copyright © 2013 by Wildside Press LLC. All rights reserved. Visit us at wildsidemagazines.com.

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  Publisher: John Betancourt

  Editor: Marvin Kaye

  Assistant Editors: Steve Coupe, Sam Cooper, Carla Coupe

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  Cover art by Jeff Doten.

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  Sherlock Holmes Mystery Magazine is published by Wildside Press, LLC. Single copies: $10.00 (+ $3.00 postage). U.S. subscriptions: $59.95 (postage paid) for the next 6 issues in the U.S.A., from: Wildside Press LLC, Subscription Dept. 9710 Traville Gateway Dr., #234; Rockville MD 20850. International subscriptions: see our web site at www.wildsidemagazines.com. Available as an ebook through all major ebook etailers, or our web site, www.wildsidemagazines.com.

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  The “Sherlock Holmes” characters created by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle are used by permission of Conan Doyle Estate Ltd., www.conandoyleestate.co.uk.

  CARTOON, by Marc Bilgrey

  FROM WATSON’S SCRAPBOOK

  Both Holmes and I are doubly delighted with this, the 10th issue of Sherlock Holmes Mystery Magazine. Firstly because, with the exception of one article and the usual columns by Mrs Hudson and Lenny Picker, all of the stories are about Holmes and me—all adventures and problems that until now I hadn’t managed to write up.

  Our second reason for rejoicing is that our magazine, which up to now has been published quarterly, now becomes a bimonthly periodical—which means, of course, that we shall be in need of more submissions!

  No fewer than ten new Holmesian narratives appear below. I have restricted myself to a brief composition called “The Field Bazaar,” though, for personal reasons, I have allowed my editorial colleague Mr Kaye to run it as if it had been written by Doyle, my literary agent. Of the other selections, I merely wish to comment favourably on one of them—“The Curse of Edwin Booth,” which, having occurred on the other side of “the pond,” I mean the Atlantic Ocean, I was not involved in it. But I am glad that Holmes has seen fit to assign its writing to Ms Carole Buggé, who already has done splendid renditions of two of our longer, hence novel-length, exploits, The Star of India and The Haunting of Torre Abbey.

  And now I shall turn over the rest of this editorial column to Mr Kaye.

  —John H. Watson, MD

  * * * *

  Other than the good doctor’s classic cases, Sherlock Holmes Mystery Magazine seldom runs reprints, but this issue makes an exception.

  One of the interesting sidelights concerning Dr. Watson’s many stories is the question of viewpointing. In all but three cases the tales are told first person by the good doctor himself. However, two of them—“The Adventure of the Lion’s Mane,” and, earlier, “The Adventure of the Blanched Soldier,” which Dr. Watson is very fond of because in it, Holmes finally admits that he was wrong for frequently badgering his friend for “pandering to popular taste instead of confining himself to facts and figures.” His exasperated companion finally dared him to “Try it yourself, Holmes!” and when he did so, the following admission was penned: “…I am compelled to admit that, having taken my pen in hand, I do begin to realize that the matter must be presented in such a way as may interest the reader.”

  The third story to vary from the first person style is “The Adventure of the Mazarin Stone”—the only tale in the entire Canon to be told third person! It came about in an unusual fashion. Its history was first written up by Watson’s literary agent Arthur Conan Doyle—(Watson would prefer it if I added the prefatory title “Sir,” but I look upon Death as the Great Leveler)—in the form of a one-act play titled “The Crown Diamond.” According to anthologist Peter Haining, it was performed in London on May 16, 1921. William S. Baring-Gould says that “The Adventure of the Mazarin Stone” occurred on a summer’s day in the year 1903. The question, of course, is who wrote it. Since it was composed third person, which Watson never chose to employ, I assume that it was adapted from its theatrical original by Doyle himself.

  In this issue, two stories are not in first person. “The Curse of Edwin Booth” is told by the title character himself, whereas Zack Wentz’s “Simplicity Itself” comes from one of those street urchins whom Holmes employed as part of his Baker Street Irregulars.

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  Our next issue will feature a new Holmes adventure transcribed by one of SHMM’s best “regulars,” Mr. Jack Grochot, as well as Watson’s own “A Case of Identity.” Other stories include ones by the following authors: Marc Bilgrey, Jay Carey, Sergio Gaut vel Hartman, G. Miki Hayden, D. Lee Lott, and Gary Lovisi.

  Canonically Yours,

  – Marvin Kaye

  CARTOON, by Basil Chap

  SCREEN OF THE CRIME, by Lenny Picker

  A Baker’s Dozen of Pastiches that Would Make Great Movies

  While it might seem that the market is currently glutted with film and TV interpretations of the Master, the Robert Downey movie series, BBC’s Sherlock and CBS’s Elementary all share a nontraditional take on Sherlock Holmes. Continued vigorous sales of DVDs of the Granada Jeremy Brett adaptations, and the original 60 stories, though, support the idea that there is still an appetite for in-period versions. And with Amazon and Netflix producing their own television series, and the likelihood that at least some of the above-mentioned series won’t be around in five years, don’t be surprised if before too long someone out there takes a crack at adding to the long and distinguished roster of actors who have played Holmes in more conventional plots and settings. But any such production would need a hook to attract investors. So, with a surfeit of modern-day Holmes, Downey covering the steam-punk possibilities of the character, and Brett, and especially BBC Radio’s Clive Merrison having done the original stories, what’s left?

  Pastiche. While purists (and those who can’t add) regard it as a four-letter word, for over a century (perhaps as far back as 1893, with J.M. Barrie’s “The Late Sherlock Holmes”), many (count me among them, at least for the last four decades), have longed for stories faithful to the spirit and tone of the originals that provide further opportunities for gaslit streets, the urgent knock on the door of 221B, dazzling deductions and devoted comradeship. That’s the route Bert Coules took after the BBC did the complete Canon for radio, with most of the stories adapted by Coules. (NB—my personal favorites—his version of “Dancing Men,” with a very different, but extremely effective, opening, and a very compelling “The Final Problem”). In his The Further Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, Coules presented 15 new exploits, inspired by the dozens of Wa
tson’s tantalizing untold tales, such as Colonel Warburton’s Madness and the politician, the lighthouse and the trained cormorant. (Perhaps his tour-de-force is “The Abergavenny Murder,” in which Holmes and Watson solve the crime from their armchairs.) In doing so successfully, Coules proved, again, that in the right hands, pastiches can be both faithful and gripping.

  With his gifts for adapting the Canon to a different medium, Coules would be the perfect choice to turn his talents—and perhaps the exploits he’s already penned—to television or film. (He has stated that he has had a film script of A Study in Scarlet sitting around for quite a while.) But our hypothetical producers might look elsewhere, to print stories that would translate well to visual media. If I were to be asked, a prospect even less likely than Mycroft departing from his set routine to rescue Mary Morstan in a boat (sorry, Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows) here, in no particular order, are some of the best written pastiches that should be seriously considered for adaptation.

  The boom in such stories triggered by the success of the Royal Shakespeare Company’s revival of the William Gillette play, Sherlock Holmes, and Nicholas Meyer’s The Seven Per Cent Solution, gave the world many less-than-stellar stories that the world could have survived without. To cite but one example, one author’s effort at Watsonian narrative voice included the line, “It was the beginning of that season the English so appropriately called winter.” But there was gold amid the dross, especially Edgar Award winner Rick Boyer’s first crack at the Canon, 1976’s The Giant Rat of Sumatra.

  Holmesians reasonably differ about the most intriguing of the adventures Watson never published, but for many, these lines in “The Adventure of the Sussex Vampire” stand alone:

  “Matilda Briggs was not the name of a young woman, Watson,” said Holmes in a reminiscent voice. “It was a ship which is associated with the giant rat of Sumatra, a story for which the world is not yet prepared.”

  Boyer was neither the first nor the last to attempt to flesh out this reference, but many agree that his novel is the best. His rodent of unusual size is responsible for a series of deaths in London and elsewhere that may be connected with a kidnapping in India. Chapter One, “The Tattooed Sailor,” opens in the best Canonical tradition—“The summer of 1894 was hot and dry and without noteworthy cases or events, save for the mysterious disappearance of Miss Alice Allistair which threw the Kingdom into shock and sorrow.” Boyer’s especially good in raising the hairs on the back of his readers’s necks, as in a scary sequence set in some dark woods where the monstrous creature may lurk. His Watson writes, “Never shall I forget the eerie spell which came upon me when I finally realized that I had been staring at Henry’s Hollow for the previous ten minutes. Even as I write these words, I can once again feel the tremor of excitement that comes when witnessing something unique and grand.” And as in the best stories, canonical or not, Boyer manages to touch the heart as well as the mind, doing so here in his account of a devastating fire on the docks, and the lives it claimed. “To call it fire would be an injustice. A slice of Hell, fetched up and planted on the river bank, would be a better description.” (Boyer’s Giant Rat has recently been reprinted by Titan Books as one of The Further Adventures of Sherlock Holmes series).

  But excellence alone is not enough to make a pastiche screen-worthy. Boyer’s Giant Rat combines deduction and action in a manner reminiscent of The Hound of the Baskervilles, the most-filmed of the original 60, and the presence in the story of a monstrous creature only makes it more appealing. (Cave canem nocte: as readers of my first column know, successfully translating the demon dog of Dartmoor from the image conjured up on the page onto the screen has been difficult at best, and a scary enormous rodent might be even harder to pull off.)

  A possible supernatural element is also present in another candidate worthy of the big or small screen, “The Secret of Shoreswood Hall,” by Denis O. Smith, inspired by the legend of the Monster of Glamis, purported to be the hideously-deformed member of the nobility who was kept locked up in a hidden room. Smith is for my money one of the five best pasticheurs ever, despite his undeserved obscurity, even among Sherlockians, a status that will change, hopefully, with the 2014 publication of his The Mammoth Book of the Lost Chronicles of Sherlock Holmes. In his four volumes of The Chronicles of Sherlock Holmes, Smith demonstrated facility at both the Watsonian voice and the Holmesian brilliance, and was nimble enough to even emulate those Canonical stories that did not center on a corpse, a much more difficult challenge. His “The Adventure of the Willow Pool” is also a candidate for adaptation—it centers on an army captain, “who, on his return from the war in Afghanistan, is ignored and shunned by friends and acquaintances in his home village—where he has been liked and respected all his life.” As with “Shoreswood Hall,” “Willow Pool” is distinguished by clever, sophisticated plotting, a baffling puzzle that gives Holmes ample opportunity to impress, and spot-on characterizations.

  2011 saw a lot of hype about Anthony Horowitz’s The House of Silk, inaccurately called the first pastiche ever authorized by the Conan Doyle estate. But despite that puffing, Horowitz, best-known stateside for his Foyle’s War TV series, delivered. A year after Holmes’s death, Watson finally brings himself to recount events that “were simply too monstrous, too shocking to appear in print… it is no exaggeration to suggest that they would tear apart the entire fabric of society.” That foreshadowing sets the bar high for the cases of The Man in the Flat Cap and the House of Silk, but Horowitz clears it, making it look easy, and leaving many hoping for another pastiche from his pen. He pulls off a variation of one of the most difficult opening scenes from the Canon—Holmes’s seeming to read Watson’s mind, this time commenting, “Influenza is unpleasant, …but you are right in thinking that, with your wife’s help, the child will recover soon.” There are many scenes that cry out for a visual interpretation to supplement Derek Jacobi’s standout audiobook. And Horowitz’s skill set means that producers need seek no further for a screenwriter.

  The late Barrie Roberts made a name for himself with nine novel-length pastiches published over a 13-year period. Sherlock Holmes and the Man From Hell (also a recent Titan reprint) uses a reference from the Canon to a matter involving a Lord Backwater as the springboard for a suspenseful mystery. What could be more evocative than a message received before a murder reading, “The man from the Gates of Hell will be at the old place at 6”? And that outing was no fluke; Roberts is one of the only authors, in my opinion, to succeed at a witchcraft-themed pastiche; Sherlock Holmes and the Harvest of Death features a plotline that offers ample bandwidth for the creative director to inspire fear with visual effects and a spooky soundtrack.

  Speaking of visuals, is there a master-criminal more florid than Sax Rohmer’s Fu Manchu? Fortunately, those who like their pastiches pitting Holmes against an evil mastermind can have their tastes sated by Cay Van Ash’s Ten Years Beyond Baker Street (1984). Fu Manchu’s traditional nemesis, Scotland Yarder Nayland Smith has disappeared, and Smith’s medical sidekick, Dr. Petrie, turns to Baker Street for help.

  Planting Holmes square in the midst of a ghost story inspired by a well-known Henry James story was a stroke of genius on the part of Donald Thomas in his Sherlock Holmes and the Ghosts of Bly. Time and again, Thomas has proven that he deserves a spot in anyone’s top ten of all-time best pastiche writers, and his latest, Death on a Pale Horse, his first novel, gives Holmes a new potent adversary in a truly epic and continent-spanning case.

  Want more suggestions, Mr./Ms. Director?

  Carole Buggé also does ghosts justice in 2000’s The Haunting of Torre Abbey, involving the spirit of a murdered monk. Fans of David Pirie’s inspired Murder Rooms series, with the real-life inspiration for Holmes, Dr. Joseph Bell, brilliantly-portrayed by the late, lamented Ian Richardson (covered in detail in my column, The NonSolitary Cyclist in SHMM 3) will surely hope that his The Dark Water—another witchcraft-themed outing will someday hit the small screen, somehow with a lead not over
shadowed by Richardson.

  Like your Holmes films to feature travel beyond familiar London scenes? Then Michael Hardwick’s Prisoner of the Devil, which plausibly injects Holmes into the Dreyfus Affair, would appeal.

  John Taylor has added to the audio universe with two CDs of new stories—The Unopened Casebook of Sherlock Holmes, featuring spine-tingling radio plays such as “The Horror in Hanging Wood” that tore a man to pieces, and the Benedict Cumberbatch-narrated The Rediscovered Railway Mysteries and Other Stories, highlighted by “The 10.59 Assassin,” Taylor’s most challenging puzzle. (And Taylor has an untold tale of his own; reliable sources suggest that the intriguingly-titled Sherlock Holmes: The Museum of the Impossible may yet become a reality.) “The Horror in Hanging Wood” especially cries out for film treatment.

  Finally, as an on-scream adversary for the Master, Jack the Ripper is at least second only to the Napoleon of Crime. Manly Wade Wellman and Wade Wellman’s off-beat but effective Sherlock Holmes: The War of the Worlds opens with an authors’s note commenting that the first Holmes-Ripper movie, A Study in Terror, was the only film they saw “in which the magnificent speed of Holmes’s thinking [was] brought to life with full effect.” That quality was also to the fore in the second Holmes-Ripper screen treatment, Murder by Decree, which suggests that Lyndsay Faye’s Dust and Shadow, an extremely well-researched and historically faithful take on the Whitechapel Murders, would do well in translation. (Yes, that makes 14, not 13, but I wondered how many of you would read this column that closely.)

  Readers may well have their own candidates for stories and writers—please feel free to email me at the address given below. If any of the above see the light of day on TV or in the theatres, I would be delighted. And as a die-hard pastiche devotee, who approaches new publications often out of hope rather than experience, I do wish that the concept I’ve suggested in-period pastiche films—does become a reality someday, even if their plots are completely new.