The Baker Street Classics Sherlock Holmes collection is a retro-inspired full set of Conan Doyle’s wonderful tales of the inimitable 'consulting detective' at work.
Featuring original illustrations from editions of the 1920s, this collection will adorn any booklover’s shelf and transport the reader back in time to Holmes’s bustling Victorian London – the misty moors of Dartmoor – the dizzying heights of Reichenbach; and the cozy living room of 221b Baker Street.
The Baker Street Classics Sherlock Holmes collection is a retro-inspired full set of Conan Doyle’s wonderful tales of the inimitable 'consulting detective' at work.
Featuring original illustrations from editions of the 1920s, this collection will adorn any booklover’s shelf and transport the reader back in time to Holmes’s bustling Victorian London – the misty moors of Dartmoor – the dizzying heights of Reichenbach; and the cozy living room of 221b Baker Street.
Arthur Conan Doyle (22 May 1859 – 7 July 1930) was a Scottish writer, responsible for creating the literary character, Sherlock Holmes.
There are few characters from the Victorian era that can possibly
have the same resonance today than a certain Sherlock Holmes who,
along with his able assistant Dr Watson, and an assorted cast of
inept policemen and nefarious villains still regularly seeps into
modern life and parlance. The concept of any amateur detective
these days being ‘Sherlockian’, the famous deerstalker, violin,
pipe and casual drug use, and oft-misquoted lines and
‘catchphrases’ are among the many legacies that show how much Sir
Arthur Conan Doyle’s most famous creation will forever be ingrained
in the psyche of the nation. And so it was with huge interest that
I heard about a new collection of the complete works, released by
Baker Street Press. No matter how many times I’ve read the canon,
it still fascinates me to this day and demonstrates what a truly
remarkable character Conan Doyle created, despite his somewhat hit
and miss results outside of the Holmes stories. This collection of
nine hardback books is just utterly beautiful to behold. There’s
something special, perhaps even more so in this day and age, about
holding a quality version of one of your favourite books and simply
immersing yourself in it. And this new release delivers more than
any that I’ve ever had my hands on. Each of the nine books features
the original cover illustrations from the 1920s, which more than
makes up for the fact that there are no illustrations inside. Each
of the four standalone novels and five collections of short stories
are here, acting as the perfect retro antidote to the most recent
recreation of the stories, the really quite awful series starring
Benedict Cumberbatch, for which I appreciate I’m in a large
minority for taking a serious dislike to. The collection begins
with A Study in Scarlet, which I have to say isn’t a favourite of
mine, neither is The Sign of Four that followed, and for me it’s
when the short stories kick in that I find Holmes at his mercurial
best, and his frustrating worst, as Conan Doyle struggled to
satisfy the insatiable demand at the time for the monster that he
had created. Despite ‘killing off’ a character who had become the
bane of his life, Conan Doyle thankfully brought Holmes back to
life after his seeming demise at the Reichenbach Falls, and the
stories have seldom been far from the public’s mind, especially
through the films of Basil Rathbone and the peerless depiction by
Jeremy Brett in the 1980s and 1990s. I really cannot recommend this
new set highly enough to those with even a passing interest in the
original stories, through to those who already have several copies
of the Sherlock Holmes stories on their bookshelves. If you think
you have the definitive version of the books, then think again, as
Baker Street Press have outdone themselves with this release.
*https://www.on-magazine.co.uk/arts/book-review/crime/sherlock-holmes-deluxe-classic-series/*
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