Rabu, 04 Mei 2011

[C861.Ebook] Download PDF The Last Sherlock Holmes Story, by Michael Dibdin

Download PDF The Last Sherlock Holmes Story, by Michael Dibdin

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The Last Sherlock Holmes Story, by Michael Dibdin

The Last Sherlock Holmes Story, by Michael Dibdin



The Last Sherlock Holmes Story, by Michael Dibdin

Download PDF The Last Sherlock Holmes Story, by Michael Dibdin

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The Last Sherlock Holmes Story, by Michael Dibdin

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  • Sales Rank: #8042217 in Books
  • Published on: 1978
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 192 pages

Review
"One of the most shocking accounts of crime ever produced."
—Chicago Sun-Times

"Dibdin in one of the best detective novelists around."
—London Daily Mail

"An explosive, controversial book . . . . A horrible thread of reality runs through the tale as it does in no other Sherlock Holmes story, for the Whitechapel murders were real."
—Baltimore Sun

From the Inside Flap
In The Last Sherlock Holmes Story, Michael Dibdin pits the sleuth of Baker Street against the Butcher of Whitechapel--the archfiend Jack the Ripper. In doing so, he gives readers a Holmes possessed of greater and more disturbing depths than the one they thought they knew.

From the Back Cover
In 1888 Sherlock Holmes is languishing for a criminal case worthy of his powers, then one materializes, heralded by the spatter of gore and the shriek of headlines. For in vice-ridden Whitechapel, three female paupers of dubious morals have been murdered, their bodies hideously defiled. And in taunting letters their killer announces his intention to strike again - and signs his name "Jack the Ripper". As conceived by the award-winning mystery writer Michael Dibdin, The Last Sherlock Holmes Story is a brilliantly inventive updating of the Holmes legend. Pitting master detective against archfiend, steely rationalism against satanic depravity, Dibdin gives us a Holmes who is more complex, more human, and ultimately more fascinating than the one imagined by Arthur Conan Doyle.

Most helpful customer reviews

6 of 6 people found the following review helpful.
Well, that was...
By kete
...interesting.

"I had rather be taken for a fraud, than have seen the many for whom Sherlock Holmes was an ideal and an example shattered and embittered on learning the horrible truth about their paragon." Michael Dibdin's John Watson says on the last pages of this book. Sadly the author didn't share these feelings.

While quite well written the book is unlikely to win any "Best Pastiche"-awards, as the author seems to be among the fans who insist that John Watson was the "real hero" of the Sherlock Holmes canon and sets out to prove his point by utterly ruining Holmes' reputation.

Certainly an arguable take on the matter and the author is within his rights, but this SH-fan is unlikely to reread this tale within her lifetime.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
A Potentially Compelling Investigation Left Undone.
By Edward J. Uecker
Dibdin does an incredibly astute impression of "Watson's" writing style but beyond that, its just recycling and re-interpretation of a lot of Holmes stories, completely devoid of any exploration of the fact that Sherlock Holmes is a classic Sociopath. Again, not a bad read, but except for the "twist" regarding the identities of both Moriarity and Jack the Ripper, most disappointing.

UNCLE FOX

4 of 5 people found the following review helpful.
An Authentic, But Profoundly Disturbing Pastiche
By London Fog
For as long as memory serves, this has been a controversial book in Holmesian circles, one which I was warned off reading many years ago, and since being informed of the blasphemies within, have avoided like the plague. I do not appreciate new "interpretations" of the Canon that play with the characters to such an extent as to make them consistently unrecognizable, but herein lies the crux of it. Dibdin is one of a scant few authors with the uncanny ability to summon the very essence of the Great Detective and his doctor - yet while I normally delight in such talent for penning an authentic Watsonian narrative, there was no such elation to be had in these pages. The tone throughout is bleak and somber, though knowing what was to come made it an emotionally difficult, oft times disturbing book to get through.

The most unnerving part of it all is the way in which the Ripper clues are made to run parallel to what we know about Holmes, even several of his cases. Such was never more apparent as in the first 'Dear Boss' letter, which actually gave me chills when read in the context of the book. And it is not necessarily the nature of the explosive plot reveal that was so upsetting, but that the solid facts of both worlds were so eloquently intertwined. In short, this was in character and at least in the book's setting, was remotely plausible. That, I think, is what unsettled me so badly.

Even at this juncture, I am unsure how to rate it. It was exceptionally well written. It was suspenseful, evoked the mood of the Ripper's Whitechapel district, and for the first half of the book, with the investigation still underway, was unquestionably the best Holmes vs. Ripper novel I have read to date. However, if you love Holmes, this is bound to be a profoundly affecting, disturbing book that tosses your emotions into the proverbial wringer. Admittedly, the ending had me in tears. I loved it, while utterly despising it at the same time, especially the way in which it ended. Even then, there is one last act by Holmes that makes you want to love it all over again... while still seething in boiling hot hatred.

Needless to say, after coming to the end, I felt like I had been hit by a truck. It is not the sort of book one can really recommend, only advise other readers what it was and was not. For my own part, I only continued reading because the plot hinged on the final few pages of SIGN, where I can remember being very angry with Watson for so blithely overlooking that statement revealing the extent of Holmes' pain over his impending marriage. It is a point I have only ever seen touched on superficially, while the "what if's" are thoroughly rummaged through here. What I will state is that it is not a sensationalistic or trashy book intended to profit off Holmes, but be aware if you do decide to give it a chance, it *is* as profoundly disturbing as most Holmesians claim it to be.

Dibdin is a genuine (if heretical) devotee of Sherlock Holmes, who is also very well versed in his 'Ripperology', though I think it is fair to say he has written something that has to be the product of the most pernicious plot idea to ever haunt an author. Certainly, it will haunt me for a long time to come.

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