mightymads: (Default)
[personal profile] mightymads posting in [community profile] victorian221b
It’s nice to return to Holmes and Watson and see how kind Holmes is to Watson. At the conclusion of the case Holmes invites Watson to come along with him to the police station since Watson is interested in the case. Holmes keeps including Watson into the action. It’s so considerate of him.

When asked about his actor friend, Hope declines to answer. Frankly, I’d like to know who that person is. I’d love to see Holmes tracing him. This would have made an excellent action sequence and another demonstration of Holmes’s deductive powers. This would work instead of the forced Mormon narrative! As we discussed in the previous post, having John and Lucy’s backstory told from Hope’s POV would be much neater, with all the unlikely and inaccurate things cut. Somehow, I can’t help mentally editing the second part of STUD to make it less awkward.

Back to the London part, it’s weird that Hope, having smelled a rat in the advertisement about the found ring, nevertheless had no suspicion when summoned by a street urchin to the very same address. But considering the previous American chapters, perhaps it’s not that surprising. Hope is a thickhead. Regarding the pills and an equal chance for the persecutor and the persecuted—that’s ACD’s notion of chivalry, isn’t it? Practically, though, it’s very silly. It would have been terribly ironic if Drebber had chosen the harmless pill and Hope had been compelled to eat the poisonous one.

In the last chapter Holmes explains to Watson his train of thoughts which was a revolutionary thing at that point. Very few detective novels did that at the time, and that was one of the factors which made Holmes legendary. His supposition that Hope wouldn’t change his name while travelling in Europe was a bit of a stretch. Hope could have easily done that. But, Hope being Hope, didn’t. The Mormon part aside, STUD is fantastic. It draws me in time and time again. When I was searching for inspiration while trying to write a mystery in another fandom, I read The Mysterious Affair at Styles (the first Poirot novel) and STUD. The difference was colossal. And while I enjoy Agatha Christie, after re-reading STUD a couple of years ago, I found myself in the Holmes fandom.

Date: 2020-10-11 06:46 pm (UTC)
earthspirits: (Holmes & Watson - hats)
From: [personal profile] earthspirits
Yes, your suggested changes would be interesting and certainly tighten the narrative up.

Date: 2020-10-11 10:56 pm (UTC)
rachelindeed: Havelock Island (Default)
From: [personal profile] rachelindeed
When asked about his actor friend, Hope declines to answer. Frankly, I’d like to know who that person is.

I like to imagine that maybe he's Godfrey Norton :) I think it would be hilarious and wonderful if Irene Adler's true love turned out to be a man who dressed as a woman to outwit Sherlock Holmes. <333333

I must admit that the only one of the novels I really love is Hound -- generally, I think the short stories are much stronger and better suited to the type of stories Holmes and Watson are all about. Most of the novels have too much padding, and this one and Valley are the worst in that regard with entire bizarre separate novellas turning up in the middle for no good reason. But any bits of business about Holmes and Watson as people are always welcome, and Study does have some nice moments between them :)
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