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Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson
- The Early Adventures, Volume II
- Narrated by: Kevin E. Green
- Length: 8 hrs and 28 mins
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Sherlock Holmes & Doctor Watson: Medical Mysteries
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- Narrated by: Steve White
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Overall
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Performance
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- By: Terry Golledge
- Narrated by: Michael Langan
- Length: 16 hrs and 9 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall
-
Performance
-
Story
In the 1980s and 1990s, the late Terry Golledge wrote 10 Holmes masterful pastiches that perfectly captured Dr. Watson's voice, as well as Holmes’ personality and methods. Mr. Golledge passed away in 1996, before these stories could be published. In early 2022, Terry’s son, Niel Golledge, reached out to Sherlockian editor David Marcum, who was electrified to read such wonderful previously lost tales about the heroes of Baker Street.
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- Medical Mysteries: Volume 1
- By: Ed Chan, Lee Shackleford, Rob Nisbet, and others
- Narrated by: Tim Peck
- Length: 10 hrs and 53 mins
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Performance
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- Sherlock Holmes & Dr. Watson: Medical Mysteries, Volume 2
- By: Ed Chan, John Linwood Grant, Paul Hiscock, and others
- Narrated by: Tim Peck
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- Unabridged
-
Overall
-
Performance
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Story
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Sherlock Holmes
- A Year of Mystery: 1881
- By: Richard Ryan, David Marcum, Derrick Belanger, and others
- Narrated by: Brian D. Belanger
- Length: 11 hrs and 42 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall
-
Performance
-
Story
For all we know, or think we know, about Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson, what we don’t know is far, far greater. In the duo’s first case, A Study in Scarlet, we learn that Holmes and Watson met on January 1st, 1881, and subsequently moved into an apartment together at 221b Baker Street. Their first case officially began on March 4th of that year, and it is argued that “The Adventure of the Resident Patient” possibly took place in October of 1881, depending on which version of the story you read. But what happened during the rest of 1881? Or all of 1882?
Publisher's Summary
There is a persistent and incorrect idea, reinforced by countless film misrepresentations, that Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson were always staid and dull British chaps of middle years (or older), with Holmes a spry, cranky, and impatient eccentric, and Watson a white-haired and portly Boobus Brittanicus, à la Nigel Bruce. Students of the true and canonical Sherlock Holmes know this to be a falsehood.
When we first meet them on January 1, 1881, Holmes is still 26 years old (although he will turn 27 in just a few days), and Watson, already a wounded war veteran, is only 28. During the three-year period between early 1881 and late 1883, through all of the early adventures which cemented their lifelong friendship, Holmes was still in his 20s, with Watson just a little over a year older. This idea is difficult for many to accept, as they cling to the image of Our Heroes as senior citizens.
This volume, Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson: The Early Adventures, is an amazing collection of some of Holmes and Watson’s fascinating cases that occurred during those first three years in Baker Street, when Holmes was creating his unique profession of consulting detective and Watson was still recovering from the war wounds that he’d received in Afghanistan and slowly returning to the business of being a civilian doctor. Included are 31 new stories in three companion volumes by some of today’s best Sherlockian pasticheurs, as well as an excerpt from the beginning of A Study in Scarlet, detailing the initial meeting of Holmes and Watson in early 1881, as well as possibly the most famous canonical tale, “The Speckled Band” (occurring in April 1883), and “The Resident Patient”, with its original restored opening text as it first appeared in The Strand magazine, indicating that this adventure occurred toward the end of the first year of Holmes and Watson’s residency at 221b Baker Street.
Join us as we climb the 17 steps to Our Heroes’ sitting room. You’ll find that they haven’t lived there quite as long in these early days, and possibly they aren’t as quite as old as you might have pictured them....