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#27646
04/29/2001 10:14 AM
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Joined:  Feb 2001 Posts: 387 enthusiast |  
| enthusiast Joined:  Feb 2001 Posts: 387 | 
OK, I've read the Sherlock Holmes and Professor Challenger books. What should I read now? Anyone recommend Sir Nigel?
 jimthedog
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#27647
04/29/2001 12:46 PM
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Joined:  Jan 2001 Posts: 13,858 Carpal Tunnel |  
|   Carpal Tunnel Joined:  Jan 2001 Posts: 13,858 | 
Dear jimthedog: I can't remember reading Sir Nigel, but anything Doyle wrote is worth reading. As an alternative, how about reading some of the books about Doyle, particularly about his interest in spiritualism, which has always seemed to me inconsistent with his overall scientific nature.
 
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#27648
04/29/2001 2:26 PM
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Joined:  Nov 2000 Posts: 3,439 Carpal Tunnel |  
|   Carpal Tunnel Joined:  Nov 2000 Posts: 3,439 | 
Dear JTD, Hope you read the  Complete Sherlock Holmes. Much more interesting than the abridged version which is generally available.As to what next : when I finished Holmes the next book placed in my hands was the Short Stories of Guy de Maupassant. Excellent!
 wow
 
 
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#27649
04/29/2001 9:28 PM
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Joined:  Feb 2001 Posts: 387 enthusiast |  
| enthusiast Joined:  Feb 2001 Posts: 387 | 
wow: My copy is a collection of all the Holmes stories and novels, coming from my Grandfather, plus some of the radio shows in normal story form, not the actual script, in another edition.wwh: I haven't read books on his interest in spiritualism, but there was an article on it , concerned mainly on how he and Houdini agued about it. Their friendship soon ended.
 
 jimthedog
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#27650
04/30/2001 12:21 AM
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Joined:  Nov 2000 Posts: 3,146 Carpal Tunnel |  
|   Carpal Tunnel Joined:  Nov 2000 Posts: 3,146 | 
concerned mainly on how he and Houdini agued about it. Their friendship soon endedHoudini escaped, then, did he?    
 The idiot also known as Capfka ...
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#27651
04/30/2001 9:38 AM
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Joined:  Feb 2001 Posts: 387 enthusiast |  
| enthusiast Joined:  Feb 2001 Posts: 387 | 
Houdini got really mad when Doyle's wife (acting as the spiritualist) had Houdini's mother talking in English, which she hadn't ever spoken. Houdini died 1st anyway.
 jimthedog
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#27652
04/30/2001 9:55 AM
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Joined:  Feb 2001 Posts: 387 enthusiast |  
| enthusiast Joined:  Feb 2001 Posts: 387 | 
Reminded of a Leacock story, "Personal Adventures in the Spirit World". You call the ghosts on the phone, and they're telling you that if everyone knew how nice it was over there they wouldn't mind paying to talk to the ghosts.
 jimthedog
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#27653
04/30/2001 7:31 PM
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Joined:  Nov 2000 Posts: 1,289 veteran |  
|   veteran Joined:  Nov 2000 Posts: 1,289 | 
If you enjoyed the ingenuity and the detective aspect of the Holmes canon, I would strongly recommend two other classic mystery authors who also created real literature, Dorothy L. Sayers and Rex Stout, one British, one American.  
 In case you have ever seen TV adaptations of Lord Peter Wimsey and Nero Wolfe (one is currently running on the Discovery Channel, and it's not a very good adaptation of Rex Stout -- makes both Wolfe and Archie into buffoons), don't let them put you off.  Likewise the Ian Carmichael portrayal of Lord Peter which the BBC did, poorly.
 
 
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