When I was alone and sitting in a reading chair in the library during lunch time, I would pick up a book that I could read in under an hour and that would be my book for the day. How awesomely sociable I was.
As a result of this constant reading, I one day picked up a picture book. Not just any picture book but one with etchings that were watercoloured. This particular book was called 'The Empty House'. Yes, some wise genius had converted Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories to abridged picture books for the short of attention span (ie. children). I loved the artwork and was rather smitten by a particular etching/watercolour of Watson kneeling at the Reichenbach falls as he searched in vain for Sherlock Holmes at the end of 'The Final Problem'.
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The Reichenbach Falls scene is what won me over. |
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Sindey Paget's original illustrations filled the picture books I read. |
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The Spirit, as drawn by creator Will Eisner. One of the masked crime fighters I started reading following my dalliance with Sherlock Holmes. |
Sherlock Holmes is Victorian England's Dick Tracy. Using bizarre talent or methods he captures amplified cartoonish underworld villains or rogues. He is mortal, putting his life on the line for others. Or to be perfectly honest, his obsessive need to solve the unknown and understand everything possible about it then brush aside any praise with a modest wave of a hand.
What is it about Sherlock Holmes? You can't explain Sherlock Holmes in one entire blog post. You could read every single thing written about Holmes but still barely scrape the surface of this fictional Titan. Very much like, say, a human being who has genuinely had 30 or 40 years of
external and internal input into his character. We see him through Watson's
eyes like we see our friends and family and loved ones. We think we know them,
then they turn around and get a pet goat, buy a Ferrari or take up pot smoking.
Even if you haven't read a single Holmes
story/book/comic/film/audio, you know of the man. Such is his popularity I would
credit to his depth of character not many fictional creations enjoy.
I love my Dick Tracy but he is a predictable soul always doing right. When he isn't being challenged he is rather two-dimensional.
I love my Dick Tracy but he is a predictable soul always doing right. When he isn't being challenged he is rather two-dimensional.
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Dick Tracy in action is about as in-depth as he gets. |
Bulldog Drummond is a bit more unpredictable. Beneath the surface of comic-like jollity, Drummond is a scarred
soldier unable to adapt to life in peacetime. There's one chapter he physically brutalises a disabled man for killing a friend of his. The moral ambiguity of the scene gives one of the most challenging moments I've ever felt reading fiction. And this from a character who can't function without two beers in his hands and several jokes up his sleeve.
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Drummond has at times a cartoonish nature, but there is a darker side to him. |
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I'm using detail to show depth of character. See? It's elementary! |
They reunite for old times sake and the ending is more intense than Reichenbach Falls in any medium. Still, you get this heartbreaking feeling throughout that Holmes and Watson's friendship as it was is long gone, bridges have been burned, and what was once familiar will never be there again. It's like losing a loved one in a way. If you're interested at all it's called 'The Adventure of the Perfidious Mariner'. If you like the odd Titanic-sinking conspiracy thrown into your Edwardian drama, you're in luck!
Sherlock Holmes might not be someone I'd make easy friends with. In fact he's probably someone we'd see on a bus and politely move away from. I'd sooner talk shop with Watson any day.
But all that being said, Arthur Conan Doyle created a character who continues to fascinate us with every generation in every genre with such depth and complexities there's groups devoted to them.
May the Game forever be afoot.