Q.1. You are going to be Sherlock Holmes. Holmes writes the notes about people in the story of the Blue Carbuncle. What does he write about these people. 1. Peterson
Henry Baker
Countess of Morcar
Ryder
Breckinridge
Mr. Windigate
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Answer:
hiii Author, Editor, Anthologist, and Owner of Peschel Press, the Publisher of Histories Behind the Mysteries
Poems For Sherlock Holmes (223B Casebook)
March 14, 2014 Bill PeschelPosted in Sherlockian Parodies and Pastiches
Instead of Sherlock Holmes parodies and pastiches, we look at three poems in praise of and poking some fun at the great detective.
sherlock-holmes-poem-herbert-kirk-2The first, by journalist John Northern Hilliard, was published in 1922, was written after Holmes’ final retirement in “His Last Bow.” Next up is “The Great Goffus Mystery” by Herbert Kirk with art by Nate Collier. The last one is Carolyn Wells’ classic “Ballade of Baker Street” that appeared in a special Sherlock Holmes edition of Collier’s magazine. L’envoi, by the way, is a short stanza at the end of a poem that addresses a particular person.
Stories from the 223B casebook — stories published during Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s lifetime (plus later ones I liked) — are published here every Monday and Friday. The up-to-date list can be found here.
On a personal note, I have to confess that I have committed the crime of writing a Holmes pastiche of my own. “The Adventure of the Whyos” compounds the felony by adding Mark Twain as the writer, acting (albeit reluctantly) as Holmes’ Watson. The roughly 26-page story (8,000 words) also cont