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Holmes in Context Sam Naidu, ed. Sherlock Holmes in Context. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017. x + 206 pp. $99.99
IF FANS of Sherlock Holmes were asked to describe the Great Detective, no doubt most would reply that he is a genius, an investigative scientist who makes brilliant deductions. In short, Holmes often is perceived as infallible and smarter than other mortals (with the exception of brother Mycroft). Yet Sherlock Holmes in Context analyzes why these expected characteristics and descriptions are only the surface and Holmes is more flawed than his fans may want to think. As chapter authors illustrate, Arthur Conan Doyle's and Sherlock television series co-creators Steven Moffat's and Mark Gatiss's limitations and preferences have resulted in a less-than-perfect fictional world. Never- theless, Holmes continues to be popular more than a century after the 1887 publication of A Study in Scarlet, and chapter authors in this new volume explore the character's influence on, for example, roleplay and cosplay, film, television series, pastiches, and referential novels.
The book's cover features a silhouette of actor Benedict Cumberbatch's Sherlock Holmes from the BBC's Sherlock television series juxtaposed against a more traditional background image of the pipesmoking Holmes. Just as Cumberbatch's Sherlock is positioned in the cover's foreground, Sherlock is foregrounded in several chapters that use the series to provide new contexts for better understanding Conan Doyle's canon. The cover likely will attract fans of the television series who may not be as familiar with other texts discussed in later chapters. Thus, it is especially important that the book is clearly written, its theories illustrated with examples suitable for fan-scholars as well as academics. The introduction, for example, provides background about the canon appropriate for non-Sherlockians. Sherlock Holmes in Context is an important book to study, both by chapter and as a whole, by anyone interested in Sherlock Holmes scholarship.
As editor Sam Naidu explains in the introduction, the book resulted from creative discussions during the 2013 Sherlock Holmes: Past and Present conference held at University College London. Since that time, much more has been written about Holmes, and new episodes of Sherlock and Elementary (the U.S.-based Holmes television adaptation) continue to alter perceptions of the iconic character. An interesting fact is that others have written more...