If
one claims to have a library, not a collection, one needs a lot of reference
books – even in this search-engine age. So I was delighted recently when a
friend gifted me with a copy of Good Old
Index: The Sherlock Holmes Handbook by Thomas W. Ross, published in 1997.
I
already own the similarly named Good Old
Index and its revision, The New Good
Old Index, by William D. Goodrich. It's been an invaluable resource to me for many years. Comparisons between the Ross and Goodrich
books are inevitable – and perhaps helpful. At this point I can only offer
first impressions, having used my new acquisition very little so far for actual
research.
The
Ross book is slight compared to The New Good
Old Index – only 171 pages compared to the older and better-known book’s
602 pages. One reason is that Ross offers some prose under each entry, albeit
in telegraphic style. Goodrich just has the entry, and the page number in the Doubleday
Complete where it can be found. Those
page numbers are very helpful! But each gets its own line, which takes up a lot
of space.
Under
“Newspapers,” for example, Goodrich lists every newspaper mentioned in the Canon,
with the corresponding page number. Ross only mentions a few journals by name, he
but describes how Holmes uses newspapers in various specific stories and how
they play into the plot in others.
To
find out something about Holmes’s thoughts on religion in Goodrich, one must to
go to the massive (128-page) entry on “Sherlock Holmes” to find just one
sub-entry leading to the famous passage in “The Naval Treaty.” Ross does much
better with references to five stories, although he misses some opportunities.
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