CD D12 - D12 World (Special Edition)
CD Roxy - Sve Što Si Znao Zaboravi (Album) 1996
CD Alternativo 2000
CD ALTERNATIVO_2001
CD ALTERNATIVO_2000
CD Jennifer Lopez – On The 6
CD Garcia - Vamonos (Hey Chico Are You Ready)(CDM)(1996)
CD Jennifer Lopez – Rebirth
"Baker Street Beat" at Year 10
Some of our Sherlockian library |
"Welcome to my library. Just don’t call it a collection.”
Those were the first words of this blog when it debuted on May 28, 2011. A decade later, I suspect you will know what I mean when I say it feels both longer and shorter than 10 years.
I began the blog at the request of Steve Emecz of MX Books when he published my first Holmes-related book, Baker Street Beat. Blogging about The Great Detective seemed an easy task for me, given that I’ve been collecting files on him for 40 years. So I disappeared into our garage to see what we had.
What we had included eleven unpublished, and mostly unpublishable, mystery novels that I had largely forgotten about. But two of them, written in the late 1980s, featured a Sherlockian sleuth that I thought MX might want to bring to light at long last. I updated and wrote them as No Police Like Holmes and Holmes Sweet Holmes, the first two novels in my McCabe-Cody mystery series, published in 2011 and 2012, respectively.
No Ghosts Need Apply, the tenth novel in that series and the twelfth McCabe-Cody overall, will be published this fall. I’ve also committed five novels about Sherlock Holmes. Many other wonderful Sherlockian adventures have happened to Ann and me along the way. And I still manage to put out this blog most weeks. This is my 942nd post.
At the end of that first blog post I wrote, “I know it’s going to be fun for me, and I hope it will be for you as well.” That is still my hope. Thanks for checking in.
CD M People - Northern Soul
CD B2K - Greatest Hits
CD Peter Tosh - Greatest Hits
What Do You Make of It, Watson?
Face it, nothing quite says "it is always 1895" like a Deadpool Sherlock bobblehead!
Here at the Andriacco house we also have 3D representations of Sherlock Holmes as a mouse (Basil of Baker Street), bird, gnome, bear, cat, rubber ducky, and multiple canines (including Wishbone and multiple Snoopys).
We have Sherlock Holmes dolls (plastic and stuffed), finger puppets, nutcrackers, wine stoppers, magnets, cream pitchers, after-shave containers, Christmas ornaments, and bookends. But, then, doesn't everybody?
And this doesn't even get into the collection of greeting cards featuring animals in deerstalkers, all of them sent our way by our friend the Unknown Constable.
What's on your shelves? Post pictures!
CD Rebeca 1996 Rebeca
CD Rebeca - Rebelde (1998)
CD S2C = Sweet Soft & Crazy – Sealed With A Kiss
CD Alexia – Remix Album '98
CD Alexia - 1997 - Fan Club (K-Tel AL-8253 CD)
CD Viktorija - Nema Veze (EP) (1996)
CD Norad - Sending All My Love (1995)
CD Culture Beat - Serenity (1993)
CD Megamix 2021
CD Shuffle Dance 4
CD Annamaria - Annamaria (EP) (1996)
CD Annamaria - Zauvijek (1998)
When Biography Gets Too Creative
Grace Dunbar with Mrs. Gibson in "Thor Bridge" |
All right, then, I’ll say it: William S. Baring-Gould just made stuff up.
The Sherlockian giant’s revered biography, Sherlock Holmes of Baker Street, is riddled with unCanonical material that he invented or borrowed from others who did, such a romantic relationship between Irene Adler and Sherlock Holmes, the identification of Athelney Jones as Jack the Ripper and (following Vincent Starrett) Mrs. Hudson as the “Martha” of “His Last Bow,” and Holmes dying on a Sussex bench at age 104.
All of this, and much more from Baring-Gould, would be surprising news to the author of the Sacred Writings. Maybe Sherlock Holmes of Baker Street should have been subtitled "A Fictionalized Life of the World's First Consulting Detective." It is refreshing, then, that June Thompson in her double biography Holmes & Watson dismisses a number of theories with the phrase “there is no evidence in the Canon.”
Unfortunately, she doesn’t apply that same yardstick to some of her own theories, such as the one that Grace Dunbar of “The Problem of Thor Bridge” was the second Mrs. Watson.
Holmes & Watson, published a generation ago, lies in quality somewhere between two other works of what name – the wonderful S.C. Roberts book from 1951 and the odiferous Will Farrell movie from 2018. Parts of Thompson’s tome are quite good and the scholarly rigor of her thought process in many cases is exemplary. Most of her speculation is well-reasoned.
However, the book is not as well-written as some of the finer examples of the Higher Criticism – those by S.C. Roberts and Vincent Starrett, for example. Her style is a bit clunky and the dozens of footnotes referring readers to the appendices are stumbling block to reading enjoyment.
Some of her errors of fact are quite jarring. She says, for example, that “The Adventure of the Mazarin Stone,” written in the third person in 1921, was “the first instance within the whole of the published canon of the use of this narrative form.” Hardly. “His Last Bow,” also in the third person, preceded it into print by four years.
Thompson also refers to the first two series of Holmes adventures as “twenty-three accounts,” whereas in fact there were 24, of which one (“The Cardboard Box”) wasn’t collected in book form until His Last Bow.
But at least she didn’t make stuff up.