Rinn
Written on Jun 5, 2013
Well I was not expecting that ending!
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THE GAME'S AFOOT...It is November 1890 and London is gripped by a merciless winter. Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson are enjoying tea by the fire when an agitated gentleman arrives unannounced at 221b Baker Street. He begs Holmes for help, telling the unnerving story of a scar-faced man with piercing eyes who has stalked him in recent weeks. Intrigued by the man's tale, Holmes and Watson find themselves swiftly drawn into a series of puzzling and sinister events, stretching from the gas-lit streets of London to the teeming criminal underworld of Boston. As the pair delve deeper into the case, they stumble across a whispered phrase 'the House of Silk': a mysterious entity and foe more deadly than any Holmes has encountered, and a conspiracy that threatens to tear apart the very fabric of society itself...With devilish plotting and excellent characterisation, bestselling author Anthony Horowitz delivers a first-rate Sherlock Holmes mystery for a modern readership whilst remaining utterly true to the spirit of the original Conan Doyle books. Sherlock Holmes is back with all the nuance, pace and powers of deduction that make him the world's greatest and most celebrated detective.
Disappointing. I felt the author maligned both Holmes and Watson: Holmes by making him less than the analytical genius he is, allowing him to fall into traps and burdening him with humility and an overactive conscience, and Watson by making him a man so in love with his own voice and eloquence that he rambles on and on and on. So many times, I was reduced to yelling at the playback, telling him to shut up already and move on.
I found the plot awkward as well, with the author trying too hard to tie the very different story lines into one cohesive plot. Not anything I'd recommend to Holmes fans.