Rex
Stout, the great mystery writer – and Sherlockian – once estimated that about a
third of all his reading was books he’d read before. I can’t say the same, but I
do enjoy revisiting old friends from time to time.
Not
long ago, for example, I picked up a copy of the Julian Symons novel A Three-Pipe Problem, which I remembered
enjoying when I read it in paperback back in the 1980s. And I enjoyed it all
over again.
Anyone
more than casually familiar with Sherlock Holmes will recognize the title’s
reference to the Holmes quote “It is quite a three-pipe problem” from “The
Adventure of the Red-Headed League.” But this isn’t a pastiche. It’s a 20th
century mystery about a television actor named Sheridan Haynes who lives on
Baker Street and plays Holmes on television. When chance puts real-life murders
in his path, how can he not don the deerstalker?
With
the help of his own Irregulars, and the hindrance of Scotland Yard, “Sheri”
takes on the case – all the while insisting (to general disbelief) that he hasn’t
confused fact and fiction. The solution is surprising and satisfying. And even
better, I didn’t remember it!
I must say it proceeds at a rather leisurely pace, which may not be for everyone.
Haynes
appeared again in The Kentish Manor
Murders, which I’ve not read.
Symons
was a well-known British mystery critic, as well as a practitioner of the
craft. His books of interest to Sherlockians include Great Detectives, Conan Doyle: Portrait of an Artist, and Mortal Consequences: A History from the Detective
Story to the Crime Novel.
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