Sherlock Holmes and the real thing A case history recorded by John H. Watson, M.D

Nicholas Meyer, 1945-

Book - 2025

"London, 189-: The great city is brought to a standstill by a series of blizzards and Sherlock Holmes is bored to distraction. It would take a miracle to bring a case to the detective's door... What arrives is not promising: a landlady who complains her artist tenant is behind on rent. Not exactly the miracle for which Holmes was hoping. But, next thing you know, there are several corpses and Sherlock Holmes and his biographer, John H. Watson, MD, find themselves drawn into one of the most bizarre cases of the great detective's career. And into the cutthroat big business of Art, where chicanery and mendacity (and cut throats) proliferate. What makes a work of art worth killing for? Is it the artist, his mistress, his dealer, ...or his blackmailer? The cast of characters is large. But are they perpetrators, accomplices, or victims? And just who is Juliet Packwood, with whom Watson has become infatuated? Oh, and there's one other problem: Is this a genuine Holmes case or a clever forgery? Is this the real thing? If you can't tell the difference, what is the difference?"--

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MYSTERY/Meyer Nicholas
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1st Floor New Shelf MYSTERY/Meyer Nicholas (NEW SHELF) Due Sep 25, 2025
Subjects
Genres
Historical fiction
Detective and mystery fiction
Published
New York : The Mysterious Press 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Nicholas Meyer, 1945- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xii, 248 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781613166567
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

If Meyer's sterling seventh Holmes pastiche (after Sherlock Holmes and the Telegram from Hell) is, as he suggests in the acknowledgments, his last, he ends on a high note, serving up his best revamp of the Conan Doyle canon in years. Lady Glendenning, owner of many London properties, is referred to Baker Street by Scotland Yard after her usually reliable tenant, portrait artist Rupert Milestone, vanishes with three months of unpaid rent to his name. When Holmes and Watson accompany Lady Glendenning to Rupert's residence, the sleuths spot several oddities, including "a kiln with no potting wheel or ceramics, an unfinished Venetian cityscape... an oddly situated portrait of the artist as a young man," and blood. Their suspicions of foul play are validated when a male corpse is found nearby, gruesomely concealed inside a snowman, and three other dead bodies promptly turn up. Meyer avoids some of the pitfalls of his previous Holmes outings, firmly rooting the plot in Holmes's investigative acumen instead of his physical derring-do, and he packs the action with devilish surprises. Baker Street regulars will be thrilled. Agent: Charlotte Sheedy, Charlotte Sheedy Literary. (Aug.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

First, the bad news: In his closing acknowledgments, Meyer, dropping his pose as Dr. John H. Watson's editor, announces: "I'm thinking this will be my last Holmes novel." Now, the other news, which is mostly excellent except for Rupert Milestone, the portrait painter who hasn't paid the rent for his Notting Hill studio for three months. His landlady, recently widowed Lady Vera Glendenning, engages Holmes to find him, but the trail has gone cold--though not as cold as the body the Metropolitan Police eventually discover in a location as gruesome as it is unoriginal. In life, Milestone seems to have been an immensely gifted mimic who could copy the styles of masters old and new while displaying precious little originality of his own. The news that he was also a restorer who worked for fearsomely dominant art dealer Sir Jonathan Van Dam, Lord Southbank, poses questions about the relations between the paintings he restored and those he created. Calling on Juliet Packwood, the niece of Milestone's dealer (and the daughter of Watson's late comrade-in-arms Col. John Packwood), and Signor Garibaldi, Van Dam's authenticator, leads Watson to a theory of the case and an amatory attachment that may compromise his deductions. At length, Holmes, more disinterested, more analytical, and able to see more complications beneath the obvious solution, leads Watson and the Met to a denouement as surprising and fulfilling as any in the sacred scriptures themselves. The whole exercise is adorned with the usual footnotes and an increasingly pointed and self-reflexive series of discussions about copies, forgeries, and the "real thing." Though Meyer ends by identifying himself as a forger, a generation of readers will be ever grateful for his efforts. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.