For
some reason, I enjoy off-the-wall riffs on Sherlock Holmes – just the sort of
thing that you may hate. Maybe it’s because nobody takes that sort of things
too seriously, including the author, and there is often a high degree of humor
involved.
Warlock Holmes: The Hell-Hound of the
Baskervilles
had me laughing out loud in places. But it took a while. Since I hadn’t read
the first book, Warlock Holmes – A Study
in Brimstone, I was a bit at sea at first. It was a little hard to come to
grips with the idea that Watson had killed Holmes but kept the body, which was
slowly reanimating.
Also,
the aptly named Warlock Holmes has demons at his beck and call, sort of like
street Arabs from hell.
The
description of the book on Amazon is hard to improve upon (except that I have
inserted an Oxford comma where needed):
The game’s afoot once more as Holmes and Watson face off against Moriarty’s gang, the Pinkertons, flesh-eating horses, a parliament of imps, boredom, Surrey, a disappointing butler demon, a succubus, a wicked lord, an overly-Canadian lord, a tricycle-fight to the death, and the dreaded Pumpcrow. Oh, and a hell hound, one assumes.
They
forgot to mention that Mrs. Hudson is a shrew.
In
addition to the title story, the volume also contains four other adventures. All
are based on original Sherlock Holmes stories. The creative distortion of these
classic tales adds something to the enjoyment for devotees – or to the outrage,
depending on your viewpoint.
If
you occasionally like your Baker Street with a big dash of humor (of the Three
Stooges variety), Warlock is the Holmes to try.
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