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Sherlock Holmes and the Giant Rat of Sumatra

Full title: Sherlock Holmes and the Giant Rat of Sumatra
ISBN: 9780786709564
ISBN 10: 0786709561
Authors: Vanneman, Alan
Publisher: Carroll & Graf
Edition: 1st Carroll & Graf ed
Num. pages: 304
Binding: Hardcover
Language: en
Published on: 2002

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Synopsis

a Story For Which The World Is Not Yet Prepared.” In These Words Dr. John Watson, In The Case Book Of Sherlock Holmes, Describes The Legend Of Harat, The Gigantic Rat Who Ruled Over The Nation Of Bada And Its “people Who Were Not Human.” Their Story, Hidden For More Than A Century In Dr. Watson’s Dispatch Box, Is Now Told At Last—in A Tale As Compelling And Colorful As Any In The Holmes Canon. What Begins With A Brutal “impossible” Murder In A Dreary London Rooming House Soon Draws The Celebrated Master Of Detection, Sherlock Holmes, And His Companion, Dr. Watson, Into A Hunt That Takes Them From England To Egypt, To India, And On To Singapore Before Encountering Harat, A Creature Even With A Case As Confounding As Any In The Original Holmes Canon And A Tale So Terrifying It Lay Hidden For More Than A Century In Dr. Watson’s Dispatch Box, Sherlock Holmes And The Giant Rat Of Sumatra Begins Familiarly Enough. Elizabeth Trent, A Bereft Widow Determined To Clear Her Husband’s Name Of Both Suicide And Embezzlement, Visits Literature’s Most Celebrated Detective At His Baker Street Flat. Within Hours, Though, Mrs. Trent Herself Is Dead, And Her Curious Suicide Note Draws Holmes And Watson Into A Hunt For A Brutal Murderer That Takes Them From England To Egypt, To India, And Finally To The City Mrs. Trent Has Fled—rich, Mysterious Singapore. Throughout The Course Of Their Sea Journey Holmes And Watson Contend With A Series Of Formidable Foes, And Continually The Two Travelers Uncover Connections Between Their Enemies And The Cunning, Ruthless Colonial Master Of Singapore, Lord Barington. They Also Find An Ally In Thecaptain Of The Prophet, Who Tutors Them In The Mysteries Of Bada—a Nation Of Subhumans Ruled By The Gigantic Rat Harat. And In The Exquisite Widow Han, Keeper Of The Secrets Of Singapore, They Find An Ally And More, As Her Exotic Charms Threaten To Undo Even The Inscrutable Sleuth’s Defenses Against The Fair Sex. “a Rollicking Adventure Story ... [that] Puts A Superb Spin On The Intellectual Byplay Between Holmes And Watson.... Splendidly Written Homage.”—chicago Sun-times

publishers Weekly

this First Novel Fails To Live Up To Its Initial Promise. A Cousin Of Dr. Watson's Late Wife Travels To Baker Street From Singapore To Consult Sherlock Holmes Regarding Her Husband's Mysterious Suicide. That Consultation Leads To Another Death Under Seemingly Impossible Circumstances, And To Holmes's Decision To Journey To Singapore To Investigate Both Crimes. At First, The Author Successfully Emulates Doyle, And The Portrayal Of A Watson Still Grieving Over His Wife's Loss Adds Welcome Emotional Depth. Unfortunately, Once The World's Greatest Consulting Detective And His Boswell Start Their Voyage East, One False Note After Another Enters, And The Story Not Only Goes Off The Tracks But Stays There. Watson Engages In A Series Of Sexual Encounters, Often Described With (perhaps Unintentional) Double Entendres (i Lay On The Couch Beside Her In Blissful Exhaustion, Penetrated To My Core), Which Do Nothing To Advance The Story Or Deepen The Reader's Understanding Of The Character. The Plot Quickly Devolves Into A Bad Episode Of The X-files, With Action Sequences Substituting For Any Real Investigation And Deduction. Many Of The Secondary Characters Come Across As Little More Than Cliches. In A Preface, Watson Asserts That The Incredible Events That Follow Really Happened, But The Explanation For The Mysterious Deaths Is So Far-fetched And Without Any Attempt At A Convincing Pseudo-scientific Basis That The Reader Is Left Not In Awe At The Author's Imaginative Speculations But Flabbergasted By His Concoctions. (jan. 4) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.