Re-reading is a good thing. Good books only get better the 15th
time around. That’s why devotees of Sherlock Holmes, Nero Wolfe, and a select
few other characters read their adventures again and again.
Rex Stout once said that one-third of his reading was re-reading. I
don’t do that, but maybe I should. Recently I had the pleasure of re-reading The War of the Worlds Mystery by Philip
A. Shreffler, former editor of the Baker
Street Journal.
The novel, published in 1998, has been in my library for years. I
don’t know what prompted me to open it again, but I’m glad I did. It’s a
wonderful mystery that takes place around Orson Welles’s famously panic-inducing
Halloween 1938 radio broadcast of H.G. Wells’s The War of the Worlds.
In the world imagined by Shreffler, Christopher Morley and other
members of the first-generation Baker Street Irregulars get sucked into the
case of a missing actress because they had been consultants to Welles’s earlier
radio adaptation of William Gillette’s Sherlock
Holmes.
The characters, including Welles at points, make their way through
Morley’s favorite haunts, including the Algonquin Hotel and McSorley’s Ale
House. These locations have a resonance for me that they didn’t have when I
first read the book. They have since become among the highlights of our visit
to Manhattan each January for the Baker Street Irregulars & Friends
Weekend.
Imagining Morley in these places is easy, especially at McSorley’s
where his painting hangs above the table where a group of us gather. Last year when
we entered, the server said, “Is it that time already?”
But you don’t have to have been there to go there in The War of the Worlds Mystery.
McSorley's Ale House, 2018 |
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