One of
my Sherlockian maxims is, “You can’t have too many copies of The Hound of the Baskervilles.”
That’s
obvious, I know. Although I’m not a collector, I own about 90 copies of that
masterpiece, each bought for a specific reason. I’ve written about this too
often to provide the links. Until recently, however, I didn’t have the bookpublished by the Baker Street Irregulars. I filled that lacuna during the Baker
Street Irregulars & Friends Weekend in New York. And high time, too!
In
2001, as part of its wonderful Manuscript Series, the BSI published a volume containing
a facsimile of the handwritten manuscript of Chapter XI of The Hound, along with the typescript of the chapter and nine often-insightful
essays.
As a
mystery writer myself, I was fascinated to see how few changes the author (Arthur
Conan Doyle? Dr. Watson?) made in the manuscript, and what those changes were.
Many of the alterations showed a careful writer in search of the precise word –
“keen” becomes “eager” near the bottom of the first page, for example. In other
kind of change, the real village of Newton Abbot in Devon becomes the “Combe
Tracey” familiar to readers in the revisions.
Like
Sherlock Holmes with magnifying glass in hand, the essayists in this volume examine
The Hound as a work of literature
from many different angles – the plot, the atmosphere, the many hypothesized sources.
Richard Lancelyn Green makes a strong argument, but to me ultimately
unconvincing, that the story was suggested by a tale about a snake in The Strand magazine.
Michael
Dirda’s “The Spell of The Hound”
closes out the book with a charming reminiscence of his own first reading of
the work which introduced him to Mr. Sherlock Holmes.
A
special treat of this volume is a reprint of an ad for the American edition of The Hound. It ran in the May 10, 1902
issue of The Publisher’s Weekly. The three
paragraphs of text, unillustrated, contains this startling statement: “The new
Sherlock Holmes novel may be dead one hundred years from now, but it’s very much
alive today.”
Dead
one hundred years from now? How wrong could a publisher get?!
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