
The Devil's Promise
Further Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
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- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی

November 3, 2014
Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson have come to the Devonshire coast for rest and seclusion in this outstanding pastiche from British Holmes expert Davies (The Scroll of the Dead). Holmes is in a black mood from inactivity back in Baker Street, and their discovery of a bludgeoned body on the beach does little to improve his disposition, especially after an unexpected visit from a sinister local priest. The same corpse is soon found by Watson buried in the sand and later at their cottage fireplace. These inexplicable events compel Holmes to inquire in the lonely town of Howden, an evil place wracked by violence and hostility to outsiders, where the detectives encounter Enoch Blackwood, son of notorious devil worshipper Bartholomew Blackwood. Satanic forces pursue them to London, where Watson recovers from a head wound, while Holmes exhibits increasingly strange behavior in a secret investigation unlike any other in his long career. Holmes purists may not appreciate this case, but it is a gripping and deeply unsettling chronicle by a highly skilled writer.

November 15, 2014
The year is 1899. Sherlock Holmes is thinking about retiring, having grown bored with the lack of challenging cases. Dr. Watson has convinced him to go on holiday to the Devonshire coast, a trip designed to give his friend some peace and relaxation. But when Holmes finds a dead body on the beach, and the body promptly disappears, peace and relaxation are the last things on either of their minds. Davies, a noted Holmes scholar and author of several previous novels about the great consulting detective, has put together a very clever mystery involving a small village whose residents seem a little odd, the family of an infamous satanist, and a dark conspiracy. If you gathered up all the stories and novels written about Holmes, those written by his creator, Arthur Conan Doyle, would be seriously outnumbered by those written by other people. There's a scale of quality, too, with the nonConan Doyle stories, ranging between very good and quite awful. Rank this one closer to the very good end of the scale: it boasts a good story, and, moreover, it feels right. A welcome addition to the vast Holmes literature.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2014, American Library Association.)
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