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Sherlock Holmes Missing Years

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"This story has great richness of voice and will take you on a fascinating journey. It is both an adventure and a colourful experience." —Calvert Markham, Treasurer of the Sherlock Holmes Society of London

It's 1893. King Kamehameha III of Hawaii declares Sovereignty Restoration Day ... Tension grows between China and Japan over Korea ... The Bengal Famine worsens ... A brilliant scientist in Calcutta challenges the system ... The senior priest at Kyoto's Kinkaku-ji temple is found dead in mysterious circumstances.

Dr. John H. Watson receives a strange letter from Yokohama. Then the quiet, distinguished Mr. Hashimoto is murdered inside a closed room on a voyage from Liverpool to Bombay. In the opium dens of Shanghai and in the back alleys of Tokyo, sinister men hatch evil plots. Professor Moriarty stalks the world, drawing up a map for worldwide dominion.

Only one man can outwit the diabolical Professor Moriarty. Only one man can save the world. Has Sherlock Holmes survived the Reichenbach Falls?

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 12, 2015
      Indian author Murthy offers an offbeat pastiche that purports to tell the real story of what happened after the legendary Holmes-Moriarty encounter at the Reichenbach Falls. In 1893, two years after Watson believed both men died, he receives a letter postmarked Yokohama, Japan. Inside is a note in Sherlock Holmes’s hand: “Watson, I need you. My violin, please. S.H.” Also enclosed is a first-class ticket for a merchant ship bound from Liverpool to Yokohama. Aboard the boat, Watson finds an oddball assortment of passengers, including his Japanese suitemate, Kazushi Hasimoto, who’s murdered during the voyage. Moriarty turns out to have survived Reichenbach, but those expecting a genuine battle of wits between the professor and the detective will be disappointed. The humor isn’t for all tastes (in a footnote Watson remarks that he didn’t read one of Holmes’s monographs, as he “felt it was one monograph too many”), and the plot drags for long stretches.

    • Kirkus

      January 15, 2015
      Still wondering what the great detective was doing between his reported death in 1891 and his reappearance in 1894? Actually, he was working closely with Shigeo Oshima, director of Intelligence Research for Emperor Meiji of Japan, on the shadowy Operation Kobe55.Or rather, working his way toward Japan, since two-thirds of this knockabout tale has passed before Holmes and Watson steam into Nagasaki Bay. After surviving his confrontation with Professor Moriarty at Reichenbach Falls in a startlingly casual reboot, Holmes sends Watson a cryptic note and a ticket on the North Star, departing Liverpool for Yokohama, and the game is afoot. A murder aboard ship soon focuses Watson's attention, and he makes confident, inaccurate accusations about which of his fellow passengers is guilty and, more amusingly, which of them is Holmes in disguise. Reunited at last, the former flat mates try one ingenious dodge after another to throw the omniscient Moriarty off their trail, pausing only long enough to converse with Rabindranath Tagore, dodge a boulder at Angkor Wat, and solve several lesser, and often more entertaining, mysteries en route to an impromptu audience with the emperor and a denouement in which Holmes unmasks a forgettable traitor lodged deep within Operation Kobe55. The most original contribution from Murthy is a series of footnotes in which Watson protests, among other things, his highhanded treatment by a young female editor at his American publisher's office. Bound to be overshadowed by Anthony Horowitz's Moriarty (2014), which offers a quite different account of the battle between Holmes and Moriarty. That's a shame, because Murthy (The Time Merchants and Other Strange Tales, 2013, etc.) provides sturdy adventure, colorful Japanese backgrounds, and a mastery of many voices, including Watson's.

      COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      March 1, 2015
      Efforts to keep Sherlock Holmes goingand maybe cash in on that mighty namehave taken some strange turns over the years. He's battled Dracula, thwarted Nazis, even gone to see Dr. Freud. Now Indian author Murthy is here with another Watsonian revision, telling us that the great detective didn't stage his return to life in The Adventure of the Empty House. Rather, Holmes and Watson were in touch soon after the Reichenbach Falls, heading off to Asia to thwart Professor Moriarty's attempt to dominate the world's opium trade. Murthy displays considerable narrative skill, setting up a locked-room mystery, mounting chases and confrontations, and doing it all so artfully that one wonders: Why drag Holmes in? In a prologue, Murthy says it's like riffs in jazz, new twists on an old tune. Maybe, but why do so many of these pastiches end up making a joke out of Holmes? Before the story's done, we see Holmes wearing a pigtail, turning vegetarian, and lecturing on it at the Royal Society. This is a first-rate adventure yarn, though many Sherlockians may be holding their noses.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2015, American Library Association.)

    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 9, 2015
      Indian author Murthy’s colorful second reimagining of Holmes post-Reichenbach (after 2015’s Sherlock Holmes, the Missing Years: Japan) opens in classic fashion with the arrival of a client at 221B Baker Street. Antonio Rozzi, an Italian scholar who has come into possession of half of an ancient map, desires to match it with the missing half. Doing so, Rozzi believes, will lead to a treasure of immense value, as suggested by an accompanying letter on parchment signed Marco Polo. This challenge sets Holmes and Watson on a chase that takes them first to Venice and then the Vatican. The intrepid pair later cross the Sahara Desert in a camel caravan, mingle with members of the Arab and Tuareg peoples, and visit fabled cities before reaching their goal of Timbuktu, where they learn a surprising secret. Sherlock Holmes devotees will find much of interest, though some readers may be put off by the confusing multiple points of view and the uneven pacing.

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