A visit
to The Mysterious Bookshop at 58 Warren Street in Tribeca, New York City, is a
gift that keeps on giving.
When
we were there for Baker Street Irregulars & Friends Weekend in January, Ann
saw and later bought a box of Mysterious Classics Cards created for the store.
The 62 cards highlight books published between 1828 and 1950. They are cards to look at, not play games with. One of the cards
describes the theme of the deck this way:
“A
collection of illustrations of the most colorful, important, or interesting
original dust jackets or covers of classic mystery, crime, suspense, and
espionage fiction. Each full-color card also contains a description placing it
in historical context.”
Most
of the significant mystery writers in that 122-year period are represented in
the cards, making for a fascinating variety of subgenres.
Because
the cards are in chronological order, The
Hound of the Baskervilles comes in at No. 6. The first five, books
published before the Hound, are:
1.
Mémoires de Vidocq.
2.
Revelations of a
Lady Detective.
3.
The Mystery of
Edwin Drood,
by Charles Dickens.
4.
The Strange Case
of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, by Robert Louis Stevenson.
5.
The Mystery of a
Hansom Cab,
by Fergus Hume.
Edgar
Allen Poe, who invented the detective story, and Emile Gaboriau, whose hero
Holmes called “a miserable bungler,” don’t get cards. Presumably that is for
artistic reasons.
I’ve
greatly enjoyed looking at the cards, which you can purchase here. For me they are a reminder that Sherlock Holmes
is part of a detective story tradition that includes both predecessors and
successors. I have read many of their adventures with great enjoyment over the
years.
But
only one name comes to my mind when someone refers to “The Great Detective.”
Hoping these cards are still available!
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