Bird and The Buddha
149 pages
English

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149 pages
English

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Description

It is 1878, and Dr. Poppy Stamford has reluctantly rekindled her relationship with Sherlock Holmes. Though it has been almost four years since they parted on uneasy terms and he continues to suppress his feelings for her, they are still intrigued and inspired-and frustrated-by each other. When her beloved uncle is arrested in relation to a series of murders near the British Museum, Poppy and the burgeoning detective set out to find the evidence to set him free. Can they track down the real killer in time to save Uncle Ormond from the rope? In the latest adventure of Poppy Stamford and Sherlock Holmes, the two not only uncover secret societies, but find themselves soul-searching to clarify their beliefs about an array of moral issues including euthanasia and the death penalty . . . as well as their feelings toward one another.

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 28 juin 2016
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781780929378
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0350€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Title Page
The Bird and the Buddha
Book Two in the Before Watson series
A. S. Croyle
Further Reminiscences of P.S.T .
(Based upon my own recollections, notes, newspaper clippings and correspondence received from Sherlock Holmes)



Publisher Information
Published in 2016 by
MX Publishing
335 Princess Park Manor
Royal Drive,
London, N11 3GX
www.mxpublishing.co.uk
Digital edition converted and distributed by
Andrews UK Limited
www.andrewsuk.com
© Copyright 2016 A.S. Croyle
The right of A.S. Croyle to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1998.
All rights reserved. No reproduction, copy or transmission of this publication may be made without express prior written permission. No paragraph of this publication may be reproduced, copied or transmitted except with express prior written permission or in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright Act 1956 (as amended). Any person who commits any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damage.
All characters appearing in this work are fictitious or used fictitiously. Except for certain historical personages, any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental. The opinions expressed herein belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect those of MX Publishing or Andrews UK Limited.
Cover design by www.staunch.com



Dedication
For Ruth



Reviews
Thomas A. Turley, author of “Sherlock Holmes and the Adventure of the Tainted Canister” - A.S. Croyle returns with her second “Before Watson” story, based on the memoirs of Poppy Stamford, Sherlock Holmes’ first love. Four years after their adventures in Ms. Croyle’s wonderful first novel ( When the Song of the Angels is Stilled ), Poppy and Sherlock reunite to investigate a series of ritualistic murders outside the British Museum. Like its predecessor, The Bird and the Buddha is set against the background of an actual Victorian disaster: the sinking of the Princess Alice in the Thames with seven hundred souls aboard. Populating the story are well-drawn secondary characters: some real (Oscar Wilde); some Canonical (Mycroft and Lestrade); and some original, like Poppy’s uncle, Dr. Ormond Sacker, who wrestles with an ethical dilemma central to the case. Croyle demonstrates her mastery of the period’s historical detail; and various intriguing elements, such as the Four Noble Truths of Buddhism, are woven skillfully into the plot. Meanwhile, Poppy and Sherlock struggle to redefine their own relationship, after his disavowal of her love for the sake of his vocation. A progressive new physician, seeking acceptance in Victorian Britain’s unwelcoming milieu, Poppy must also face the frustrations of loving a young man who wants to turn himself into a reasoning machine. Even cast adrift emotionally, she remains the most appealing heroine since Irene Adler. While their romantic future remains uncertain at the novel’s end, the good news is that Ms. Croyle has more cases for Poppy and Sherlock in the works.
Book One - When the Song of the Angels is Stilled:
Kirkus - This fast-paced tale will appeal to those who like to ponder what made Sherlock Holmes the great detective he was. An engaging addition to Sherlock Holmes legendry.
Foreword - Five-Star Review - For anyone in love with Sherlock Holmes, this story must be savored, not merely read.
Chris Redmond (Author of ‘Lives Beyond Baker Street)
One involves the “angels” referred to in the title - infants being done to death by baby-farmers, a real enough social evil in mid-Victorian times. Holmes, Poppy and other characters in the novel are drawn into a crusade against this form of murder at the behest of (naturally) Mycroft Holmes, who has no scruples about risking others’ lives to do what the government needs done. Holmes makes some deductions, Poppy takes the lead in a sting operation, and arrests are made, though the plague as a whole is not yet ended.
Second, Sherlock Holmes witnesses and investigates not one but two train crashes - again, a common enough phenomenon in that era. It is a trifle odd to see Holmes using his powers as a transportation safety investigator rather than a detective, but Croyle plausibly portrays the young man not yet sure what career will enable him to make use of his intellectual powers, so the experiment is interesting and satisfying.
And third, the novel retells the events of “The ‘Gloria Scott’,” which have always been considered a little odd anyway. Holmes on his way to chapel? Holmes with a friend, Victor Trevor? In Croyle’s version of things, Poppy is on a path toward marriage with Victor when her (not his) dog bites Holmes’s ankle and an acquaintance naturally begins. Then the arrival of Hudson and the terror and eventual death of “old” Trevor, the Justice of the Peace, unfold as Poppy watches and Holmes tries to understand. To a Sherlockian these are of course the most relevant pages of the book.
Croyle writes interestingly and articulately, and her picture of Victorian society is convincing with only a few exceptions. The title page indicates that When the Song of the Angels Is Stilled (the title, incidentally, is taken from a contemporary Epiphany hymn) is “A ‘Before Watson’ Novel, Book One.” So there will be more, and that is good news.



Acknowledgements
Once again, I must take off my hat to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle for creating one of the most enduring characters in literature - Sherlock Holmes.
Deepest gratitude to Steve Emecz and everyone at MX Publishing for this opportunity. I appreciate the encouragement of fellow MX authors and would especially like to note David Marcum for giving me more insight into how many Sherlockians feel about chronologies, other pastiches, and The Great Holmes Tapestry. I think we can agree to disagree on some of the fine points but share love and admiration for the Great Detective.
Thanks also to Pam Turner for her publicity expertise, and to my first readers - Nancy Schmock, Tim James, Scott Britton, Susan Wenz, Cindie Green, Thomas Turley, and Phillip Turner, who kindly edited portions of and made invaluable suggestions for this novel (see his blog The Great Gray Bridge) . . . I am deeply grateful to Debbie Clark, a fellow Sherlockian, and Rae Griffin, my BFF, whose careful proofreading, suggestions and comments were immensely helpful in polishing the novel.
Very special thanks to my friend, mentor, advisor and editor, Ruth E . Friend, who spent so many hours proofreading, editing and making suggestions for improvements, and without whom not a single word would have made it to the page.
Last but not least, hugs to Michael, also a First Reader and the love of my life, who is patient and understanding, who puts up with my need to escape to my writing cave, and who has promised to spend the rest of his life bringing me coffee when I do.



Author’s Note
This novel takes place in 1878, four years after the events of the first book in the series, When the Song of the Angels is Stilled . Once again, the narrator is Poppy Stamford, a new fictional character and the sister of Dr. Michael Stamford, the man who would introduce Sherlock Holmes to Dr. John Watson. I was very pleased to read a review by Thomas Turley of the first book, in which he said that Poppy is “the most appealing heroine since Irene Adler.” [Tom, I am glad you still liked like her in Book Two!]
Though I, like many other authors of Holmes pastiches rely heavily upon Baring-Gould’s ‘biography,’ it is nonetheless a fictional chronology and account of Sherlock’s life. There are many gaps in Doyle’s stories, and little is actually known about Sherlock’s family or his background. Doyle never revealed whether he attended Cambridge or Oxford or both (as Baring-Gould asserts). Doyle gives few dates certain in his tales and only a handful of events and landmarks to which we can point as real.
This novel is in part a re-imagining of The Musgrave Ritual, one of Sherlock’s early cases. Some may take umbrage with them being alumni of Oxford and in placing the Musgrave case in 1878 rather than 1879, the year noted by William S. Baring-Gould, the noted Sherlock Holmes scholar, best known as the author of the influential fictional biography, Sherlock Holmes of Baker Street: A life of the world’s first consulting detective. According to Baring-Gould (see Sherlock Holmes of Baker Street , published in 1962, at page 41), Reginald Musgrave walked into Holmes’ rooms on Montague Street on October 2, 1879 to ask his former college acquaintance for assistance with a case. It had been several years since they had been undergraduates at Caius College, Cambridge. Baring-Gould quotes Sherlock (at page 28) as stating to Watson, “You never heard me talk of Victor Trevor? . . . He was one of the only friends I made during the two years I was at Christ Church.” But then Baring-Gould admits in a footnote “In his published account of the first case in which Holmes was ever engaged, Watson saw fit to tender this line: ‘He was the only friend I made during the two years I was at college.’” Thus, Baring-Gould speculates where Sherlock Holmes went to college and met Trevor. Doyle never says. I set Sherlock Holmes’ death in the early 1940’s. But Baring-Gould estimates Sherlock’s death occurred on his 103 rd birthday. (January 6, 1957). Many other dates have been suggested by other authors.
I do not take Baring-Gould or any other author as gospel (though Baring-Gould is certainly a great jumping-off point), nor do I consider any ‘facts’ in the vast array of pastiches to be ‘cumulative evidence.’ If it is not in a Sherlock Holmes

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