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#2351 From: sumalsn
Date:: Sun Aug 5, 2007 7:19 am
Subject:: Re: Digest Number 884
sumalsn
Offline Offline
 
Dear Arun,
Welcome aboard. We recognize a true fan when we see one.We are the
best Indian Society disussing SH and we intend to stay that way.
Thanks for the introduction and keep posting!
Sumalsn

#2350 From: "jeff katz" <jeff_katz@...>
Date:: Tue Jul 31, 2007 2:10 am
Subject:: RE: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 901
jeff_katz_2
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
Ah, yes. The "inverted" detective story was pioneered by R Austin Freeman,
who wrote the stories about Dr Thorndyke. The first was 1908, I think.
Freeman based his detective on the parent of modern forensics, Bernard
Spilsbury. His point was that the reader was interested not in the mystery,
but in the detection. Much like the "CSI" TV series in that respect.

cheers,

Jeff
>________________________________________________________________________
>________________________________________________________________________
>
>2.1. Re: Rules of Detective Fiction
>     Posted by: "Tim Symonds" tim.symonds@...
>     Date: Thu Jul 26, 2007 7:37 pm
>
>There was an interesting television series made in the US which was
>broadcast here in the UK a few years back, about a detective in
>(presumably)
>California who wore a dirty mackintosh raincoat and drove an unreliable old
>Peugeot 404 (I think it was a Peugeot).  The hallmark of the series was the
>viewer was shown very early on who the murderer was, and we then watched
>how
>the detective worked his way to getting a confession.  Although this is the
>exact opposite of most detective stories, it still maintained the viewers'
>interest right the way through as we waited for 'divine retribution' in the
>form of an arrest.
>
>
>   _____
>
>From: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
>[mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...] On Behalf Of
>arun.pkumar@...
>Sent: 26 July 2007 05:53
>To: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
>Subject: RE: [sherlock holmes society of india] Rules of Detective Fiction
>
>
>
>Majority of the novels in the Golden Age period struck to these rules
>and the popular authors have been very successful in using these rules
>and playing fair at the same time with the reader.
>
>Sometimes, it gets too dull or banal to be using all the rules. So comes
>a twist where in one of the rules is tweaked or completely ignored but
>all the remaining rules are intact! Even though the critics scoff at
>this deviation, my minor observation is that it's these books where a
>rule or rules have been ignored which have gone on to attract a lot of
>reader attention and have become more famous than the others. Agatha
>Christie was a fitting example for it. She just loved to break the rules
>and yet play fair. Trying to point out things without giving out the
>solutions. For ex:
>1. Agatha Christie's The Murder Of Roger Ackroyd - Where she does away
>with the most basic precept of Detective fiction.
>A lot of critics puh-hued the book but it's still considered her most
>famous work?
>2. The Murder on the Orinet Express - How many books have an ending of
>that sort!
>3. Hercule Piorot's Christmas - Again a break from the normal(Christie
>claims that she did it to please her grand-daughter - to make it
>impossible to guess the murderer) though the same has been tried in one
>of the earlier classics - The Mystery of the Yellow Room by Gaston
>Leroux - this latter book being hailed by John Dickson Carr as the best
>detective novel ever written.
>4. To over come the rule of the crime HAVING to be a murder, she used
>the ingenious idea of having 2 or 3 deaths and still having only 1
>murderer(with or without an accomplice) and make 1 or even 2 deaths out
>of the 3 as suicides or accidents. Taken at the flood and Death on the
>Nile are two fitting examples of this if I remember correctly.
>
>The list is endless as each author would at one time or the other be
>tempted to break one of the traditional rules and make the book more
>interesting. However, as Ellery Queen or JDC puts it, the single most
>important rule which needs to be adhered to is the fact that the
>denouement and the explanation given by the author should be such that
>the things could've happened in only THAT ONE WAY and NO OTHER WAY and
>prove beyond doubt that all the other redherrings & clues couldn't have
>been construed in any other way to arrive at any different ending other
>the one provided! If the author can render such an ending, then the job
>has been done for me. It's always this question asked by the reader "AH!
>Why couldn't it have happened this way?" (if it remains unanswered by
>the author), that troubles the reader and encourages him to brand the
>book as a not so good one!
>
>It's this quality that is inherent in Sherlcok Holmes Stories - the
>ending just can't happen in any other way as it's so lucidly explained
>by SH in the end - every single time. This quality in a way overcomes
>all the other trivial deviations of the golden rules - if any.
>
>A very interesting topic for any detective fiction fan. Keep it up guys.
>
>/Arun.
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: SherlockHolmesSocie
><mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia%40yahoogroups.co.in>
>tyofIndia@...
>[mailto:SherlockHolmesSocie
><mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia%40yahoogroups.co.in>
>tyofIndia@...] On Behalf Of
>Nikhil Prasad Ojha
>Sent: Thursday, July 26, 2007 8:47 AM
>To: SherlockHolmesSocie
><mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia%40yahoogroups.co.in>
>tyofIndia@...
>Subject: Re: [sherlock holmes society of india] Rules of Detective
>Fiction
>
>As illustrated by the events and denouement of my favourite story, many
>of these 'rules' don't always work.
>
>Nikhil
>
>*"...[I]f it should ever strike you that I am getting a little
>over-confident in my powers, or giving less pains to a case than it
>deserves, kindly whisper 'Norbury' in my ear, and I shall be infinitely
>obliged to you."
>*
>
>On 7/25/07, pinaki roy <monkaroy@yahoo. <mailto:monkaroy%40yahoo.com> com>
>wrote:
> >
> > Dear Sherlockians,
> >
> >
> > Having had read Arun's and Tim's letter regarding the detective
> > fiction authors' not giving a clue to what is rally going to happen, I
>
> > feel that here we may as well remember the Twenty Golden Rules of
> > Detective Fiction that S.S.Van Dine proposed in 1928. Almost all of
> > these were followed by Arthur Conan Doyle in his Sherlock Holmes
>stories.
> >
> > Tzvetan Todorov
> > thus sums up in "The Typology of Detective Fiction" (included in "The
> > Murder of Roger Ackroyd: A Collection of Critical Essays". Ed.
> > Nilanjana Gupta. New
> > Delhi: Worldview, 2001. Pp. 50-1) the twenty rules of detective
> > fiction
> > writing:
> >
> >
> > The novel must have at most one detective and one criminal, and at
> > least one victim (a corpse)
> > The culprit must not be a professional criminal, must not be the
> > detective, and must kill for personal reasons
> > Love has no place in detective fiction
> > The culprit must have a certain importance - (a) in life: not be a
> > butler or a chambermaid (b) in the book: must be one of the main
>characters
> > Everything must be explained rationally
> > There is no place for detailed descriptions, nor for psychological
> > analyses
> > With regard to information about the story, the following homology
> > must be observed - author: reader = criminal: detective
> > Banal situations and solutions must be avoided.
> >
> > If an author adheres to the Golden Rules, s/he cannot reveal anything
> > significant about the plot or identity of the criminal until at the
> > end of the story.
> >
> > I am waiting to hear comments from other eminent Sherlockians
> > regarding this.
> >
> >
> > Thanking you,
> >
> > Yours sincerely,
> >
> > (Pinaki Roy)
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
>
>The information contained in this electronic message and any attachments to
>this message are intended for the exclusive use of the addressee(s) and may
>contain proprietary, confidential or privileged information. If you are not
>the intended recipient, you should not disseminate, distribute or copy this
>e-mail. Please notify the sender immediately and destroy all copies of this
>message and any attachments.
>
>WARNING: Computer viruses can be transmitted via email. The recipient
>should
>check this email and any attachments for the presence of viruses. The
>company accepts no liability for any damage caused by any virus transmitted
>by this email.
>
>www.wipro.com
>
>
>
>[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>
>Messages in this topic (4)
>________________________________________________________________________
>________________________________________________________________________
>
>
>
>------------------------------------------------------------------------
>Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>------------------------------------------------------------------------
>

_________________________________________________________________
http://newlivehotmail.com

#2349 From: sridhar C <cs_gollum@...>
Date:: Fri Jul 27, 2007 3:17 am
Subject:: RE: [sherlock holmes society of india] Ms. Rowling?
cs_gollum
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
Dear Tim and other SHians,

   Isn't that what was being said about Die Hard? Willis nevertheless is back
with his "yippee-ka-yay" stuff and what's more there is talk already about a 5th
instalment.

   Holmes did not then have the advantage of world fame back then as Harry Potter
has now. The latter has technology to thank for (apart from his wand, of course)
as a major factor in his world-wide popularity. Besides, Sir ACD had to contend
mainly with adults, who are easier to reason with, while Ms. Rowling ... I guess
only Time will tell.


   Sridhar

Tim Symonds <tim.symonds@...> wrote:
           I haven't looked at the seventh and 'final' JK Rowling but I believe
she has
bumped off a significant character. I wonder if in the future the demand
for her to bring this character back to life will be as great as the demand
for ACD to bring back SH?

From: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
[mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...] On Behalf Of sridhar
C
Sent: 26 July 2007 14:03
To: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
Subject: [sherlock holmes society of india] Ms. Rowling?

LOL, Sumal. She has just finished off (or has she?) one of her major
headaches and you expect her to start off on another?!!

Sridhar

sumalsn <no_reply@yahoogroup <mailto:no_reply%40yahoogroups.co.in> s.co.in>
wrote:
Dear Holmesians,
I suppose Ms JK Rowling would have been a good choice. She is expected
to be free too!
Sumalsn

---------------------------------
Fussy? Opinionated? Impossible to please? Perfect. Join Yahoo!'s user panel
and lay it on us.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]






---------------------------------
Yahoo! oneSearch: Finally,  mobile search that gives answers, not web links.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

#2348 From: "Tim Symonds" <tim.symonds@...>
Date:: Thu Jul 26, 2007 2:06 pm
Subject:: RE: [sherlock holmes society of india] Rules of Detective Fiction
tim.symonds@...
Send Email Send Email
 
There was an interesting television series made in the US which was
broadcast here in the UK a few years back, about a detective in (presumably)
California who wore a dirty mackintosh raincoat and drove an unreliable old
Peugeot 404 (I think it was a Peugeot).  The hallmark of the series was the
viewer was shown very early on who the murderer was, and we then watched how
the detective worked his way to getting a confession.  Although this is the
exact opposite of most detective stories, it still maintained the viewers'
interest right the way through as we waited for 'divine retribution' in the
form of an arrest.


   _____

From: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
[mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...] On Behalf Of
arun.pkumar@...
Sent: 26 July 2007 05:53
To: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
Subject: RE: [sherlock holmes society of india] Rules of Detective Fiction



Majority of the novels in the Golden Age period struck to these rules
and the popular authors have been very successful in using these rules
and playing fair at the same time with the reader.

Sometimes, it gets too dull or banal to be using all the rules. So comes
a twist where in one of the rules is tweaked or completely ignored but
all the remaining rules are intact! Even though the critics scoff at
this deviation, my minor observation is that it's these books where a
rule or rules have been ignored which have gone on to attract a lot of
reader attention and have become more famous than the others. Agatha
Christie was a fitting example for it. She just loved to break the rules
and yet play fair. Trying to point out things without giving out the
solutions. For ex:
1. Agatha Christie's The Murder Of Roger Ackroyd - Where she does away
with the most basic precept of Detective fiction.
A lot of critics puh-hued the book but it's still considered her most
famous work?
2. The Murder on the Orinet Express - How many books have an ending of
that sort!
3. Hercule Piorot's Christmas - Again a break from the normal(Christie
claims that she did it to please her grand-daughter - to make it
impossible to guess the murderer) though the same has been tried in one
of the earlier classics - The Mystery of the Yellow Room by Gaston
Leroux - this latter book being hailed by John Dickson Carr as the best
detective novel ever written.
4. To over come the rule of the crime HAVING to be a murder, she used
the ingenious idea of having 2 or 3 deaths and still having only 1
murderer(with or without an accomplice) and make 1 or even 2 deaths out
of the 3 as suicides or accidents. Taken at the flood and Death on the
Nile are two fitting examples of this if I remember correctly.

The list is endless as each author would at one time or the other be
tempted to break one of the traditional rules and make the book more
interesting. However, as Ellery Queen or JDC puts it, the single most
important rule which needs to be adhered to is the fact that the
denouement and the explanation given by the author should be such that
the things could've happened in only THAT ONE WAY and NO OTHER WAY and
prove beyond doubt that all the other redherrings & clues couldn't have
been construed in any other way to arrive at any different ending other
the one provided! If the author can render such an ending, then the job
has been done for me. It's always this question asked by the reader "AH!
Why couldn't it have happened this way?" (if it remains unanswered by
the author), that troubles the reader and encourages him to brand the
book as a not so good one!

It's this quality that is inherent in Sherlcok Holmes Stories - the
ending just can't happen in any other way as it's so lucidly explained
by SH in the end - every single time. This quality in a way overcomes
all the other trivial deviations of the golden rules - if any.

A very interesting topic for any detective fiction fan. Keep it up guys.

/Arun.

-----Original Message-----
From: SherlockHolmesSocie
<mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia%40yahoogroups.co.in>
tyofIndia@...
[mailto:SherlockHolmesSocie
<mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia%40yahoogroups.co.in>
tyofIndia@...] On Behalf Of
Nikhil Prasad Ojha
Sent: Thursday, July 26, 2007 8:47 AM
To: SherlockHolmesSocie
<mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia%40yahoogroups.co.in>
tyofIndia@...
Subject: Re: [sherlock holmes society of india] Rules of Detective
Fiction

As illustrated by the events and denouement of my favourite story, many
of these 'rules' don't always work.

Nikhil

*"...[I]f it should ever strike you that I am getting a little
over-confident in my powers, or giving less pains to a case than it
deserves, kindly whisper 'Norbury' in my ear, and I shall be infinitely
obliged to you."
*

On 7/25/07, pinaki roy <monkaroy@yahoo. <mailto:monkaroy%40yahoo.com> com>
wrote:
>
> Dear Sherlockians,
>
>
> Having had read Arun's and Tim's letter regarding the detective
> fiction authors' not giving a clue to what is rally going to happen, I

> feel that here we may as well remember the Twenty Golden Rules of
> Detective Fiction that S.S.Van Dine proposed in 1928. Almost all of
> these were followed by Arthur Conan Doyle in his Sherlock Holmes
stories.
>
> Tzvetan Todorov
> thus sums up in "The Typology of Detective Fiction" (included in "The
> Murder of Roger Ackroyd: A Collection of Critical Essays". Ed.
> Nilanjana Gupta. New
> Delhi: Worldview, 2001. Pp. 50-1) the twenty rules of detective
> fiction
> writing:
>
>
> The novel must have at most one detective and one criminal, and at
> least one victim (a corpse)
> The culprit must not be a professional criminal, must not be the
> detective, and must kill for personal reasons
> Love has no place in detective fiction
> The culprit must have a certain importance - (a) in life: not be a
> butler or a chambermaid (b) in the book: must be one of the main
characters
> Everything must be explained rationally
> There is no place for detailed descriptions, nor for psychological
> analyses
> With regard to information about the story, the following homology
> must be observed - author: reader = criminal: detective
> Banal situations and solutions must be avoided.
>
> If an author adheres to the Golden Rules, s/he cannot reveal anything
> significant about the plot or identity of the criminal until at the
> end of the story.
>
> I am waiting to hear comments from other eminent Sherlockians
> regarding this.
>
>
> Thanking you,
>
> Yours sincerely,
>
> (Pinaki Roy)
>
>
>
>
>

The information contained in this electronic message and any attachments to
this message are intended for the exclusive use of the addressee(s) and may
contain proprietary, confidential or privileged information. If you are not
the intended recipient, you should not disseminate, distribute or copy this
e-mail. Please notify the sender immediately and destroy all copies of this
message and any attachments.

WARNING: Computer viruses can be transmitted via email. The recipient should
check this email and any attachments for the presence of viruses. The
company accepts no liability for any damage caused by any virus transmitted
by this email.

www.wipro.com



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

#2347 From: "Tim Symonds" <tim.symonds@...>
Date:: Thu Jul 26, 2007 1:56 pm
Subject:: RE: [sherlock holmes society of india] Ms. Rowling?
tim.symonds@...
Send Email Send Email
 
I haven't looked at the seventh and 'final' JK Rowling but I believe she has
bumped off a significant character.  I wonder if in the future the demand
for her to bring this character back to life will be as great as the demand
for ACD to bring back SH?

From: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
[mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...] On Behalf Of sridhar
C
Sent: 26 July 2007 14:03
To: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
Subject: [sherlock holmes society of india] Ms. Rowling?

LOL, Sumal. She has just finished off (or has she?) one of her major
headaches and you expect her to start off on another?!!


Sridhar

sumalsn <no_reply@yahoogroup <mailto:no_reply%40yahoogroups.co.in> s.co.in>
wrote:
Dear Holmesians,
I suppose Ms JK Rowling would have been a good choice. She is expected
to be free too!
Sumalsn

---------------------------------
Fussy? Opinionated? Impossible to please? Perfect. Join Yahoo!'s user panel
and lay it on us.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

#2346 From: sridhar C <cs_gollum@...>
Date:: Thu Jul 26, 2007 1:02 pm
Subject:: [sherlock holmes society of india] Ms. Rowling?
cs_gollum
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
LOL, Sumal. She has just finished off (or has she?) one of her major headaches
and you expect her to start off on another?!!


   Sridhar

sumalsn <no_reply@...> wrote:
           Dear Holmesians,
I suppose Ms JK Rowling would have been a good choice. She is expected
to be free too!
Sumalsn






---------------------------------
Fussy? Opinionated? Impossible to please? Perfect.  Join Yahoo!'s user panel and
lay it on us.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

#2345 From: <arun.pkumar@...>
Date:: Thu Jul 26, 2007 4:52 am
Subject:: RE: [sherlock holmes society of india] Rules of Detective Fiction
piorot13
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
Majority of the novels in the Golden Age period struck to these rules
and the popular authors have been very successful in using these rules
and playing fair at the same time with the reader.

Sometimes, it gets too dull or banal to be using all the rules. So comes
a twist where in one of the rules is tweaked or completely ignored but
all the remaining rules are intact! Even though the critics scoff at
this deviation, my minor observation is that it's these books where a
rule or rules have been ignored which have gone on to attract a lot of
reader attention and have become more famous  than the others. Agatha
Christie was a fitting example for it. She just loved to break the rules
and yet play fair. Trying to point out things without giving out the
solutions. For ex:
1. Agatha Christie's The Murder Of Roger Ackroyd - Where she does away
with the most basic precept of Detective fiction.
A lot of critics puh-hued the book but it's still considered her most
famous work?
2. The Murder on the Orinet Express - How many books have an ending of
that sort!
3. Hercule Piorot's Christmas - Again a break from the normal(Christie
claims that she did it to please her grand-daughter - to make it
impossible to guess the murderer) though the same has been tried in one
of the earlier classics - The Mystery of the Yellow Room by Gaston
Leroux - this latter book being hailed by John Dickson Carr as the best
detective novel ever written.
4. To over come the rule of the crime HAVING to be a murder, she used
the ingenious idea of having 2 or 3 deaths and still having only 1
murderer(with or without an accomplice) and make 1 or even 2 deaths out
of the 3 as suicides or accidents. Taken at the flood and Death on the
Nile are two fitting examples of this if I remember correctly.

The list is endless as each author would at one time or the other be
tempted to break one of the traditional rules and make the book more
interesting. However, as Ellery Queen or JDC puts it, the single most
important rule which needs to be adhered to is the fact that the
denouement and the explanation given by the author should be such that
the things could've happened in only THAT ONE WAY and NO OTHER WAY and
prove beyond doubt that all the other redherrings & clues couldn't have
been construed in any other way to arrive at any different ending other
the one provided! If the author can render such an ending, then the job
has been done for me. It's always this question asked by the reader "AH!
Why couldn't it have happened this way?" (if it remains unanswered by
the author), that troubles the reader and encourages him to brand the
book as a not so good one!

It's this quality that is inherent in Sherlcok Holmes Stories - the
ending just can't happen in any other way as it's so lucidly explained
by SH in the end - every single time. This quality in a way overcomes
all the other trivial deviations of the golden rules - if any.

A very interesting topic for any detective fiction fan. Keep it up guys.

/Arun.




-----Original Message-----
From: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
[mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...] On Behalf Of
Nikhil Prasad Ojha
Sent: Thursday, July 26, 2007 8:47 AM
To: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
Subject: Re: [sherlock holmes society of india] Rules of Detective
Fiction

As illustrated by the events and denouement of my favourite story, many
of these 'rules' don't always work.

Nikhil

*"...[I]f it should ever strike you that I am getting a little
over-confident in my powers, or giving less pains to a case than it
deserves, kindly whisper 'Norbury' in my ear, and I shall be infinitely
obliged to you."
*

On 7/25/07, pinaki roy <monkaroy@...> wrote:
>
> Dear Sherlockians,
>
>
> Having had read Arun's and Tim's letter regarding the detective
> fiction authors' not giving a clue to what is rally going to happen, I

> feel that here we may as well remember the Twenty Golden Rules of
> Detective Fiction that S.S.Van Dine proposed in 1928. Almost all of
> these were followed by Arthur Conan Doyle in his Sherlock Holmes
stories.
>
>                                                    Tzvetan Todorov
> thus sums up in "The Typology of Detective Fiction" (included in "The
> Murder of Roger Ackroyd: A Collection of Critical Essays". Ed.
> Nilanjana Gupta. New
> Delhi: Worldview, 2001. Pp. 50-1) the twenty rules of detective
> fiction
> writing:
>
>
>   The novel must have at most one detective and one criminal, and at
> least one victim (a corpse)
>   The culprit must not be a professional criminal, must not be the
> detective, and must kill for personal reasons
>   Love has no place in detective fiction
>   The culprit must have a certain importance - (a) in life: not be a
> butler or a chambermaid  (b) in the book: must be one of the main
characters
>   Everything must be explained rationally
>   There is no place for detailed descriptions, nor for psychological
> analyses
>   With regard to information about the story, the following homology
> must be observed - author: reader = criminal: detective
>   Banal situations and solutions must be avoided.
>
> If an author adheres to the Golden Rules, s/he cannot reveal anything
> significant about the plot or identity of the criminal until at the
> end of the story.
>
> I am waiting to hear comments from other eminent Sherlockians
> regarding this.
>
>
> Thanking you,
>
> Yours sincerely,
>
> (Pinaki Roy)
>
>
>
>
>


The information contained in this electronic message and any attachments to this
message are intended for the exclusive use of the addressee(s) and may contain
proprietary, confidential or privileged information. If you are not the intended
recipient, you should not disseminate, distribute or copy this e-mail. Please
notify the sender immediately and destroy all copies of this message and any
attachments.

WARNING: Computer viruses can be transmitted via email. The recipient should
check this email and any attachments for the presence of viruses. The company
accepts no liability for any damage caused by any virus transmitted by this
email.

www.wipro.com

#2344 From: "Nikhil Prasad Ojha" <npojha@...>
Date:: Thu Jul 26, 2007 3:16 am
Subject:: Re: [sherlock holmes society of india] Rules of Detective Fiction
nikhilprasad...
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
As illustrated by the events and denouement of my favourite story, many of
these 'rules' don't always work.

Nikhil

*"...[I]f it should ever strike you that I am getting a little
over-confident in my powers, or giving less pains to a case than it
deserves, kindly whisper 'Norbury' in my ear, and I shall be infinitely
obliged to you."
*

On 7/25/07, pinaki roy <monkaroy@...> wrote:
>
> Dear Sherlockians,
>
>
> Having had read Arun's and Tim's letter regarding the detective fiction
> authors' not giving a clue to what is rally going to happen, I feel that
> here we may as well remember the Twenty Golden Rules of Detective Fiction
> that S.S.Van Dine proposed in 1928. Almost all of these were followed by
> Arthur Conan Doyle in his Sherlock Holmes stories.
>
>                                                    Tzvetan Todorov thus
> sums up in "The Typology of Detective Fiction" (included in "The Murder of
> Roger Ackroyd: A Collection of Critical Essays". Ed. Nilanjana Gupta. New
> Delhi: Worldview, 2001. Pp. 50-1) the twenty rules of detective fiction
> writing:
>
>
>   The novel must have at most one detective and one criminal, and at least
> one victim (a corpse)
>   The culprit must not be a professional criminal, must not be the
> detective, and must kill for personal reasons
>   Love has no place in detective fiction
>   The culprit must have a certain importance – (a) in life: not be a
> butler or a chambermaid  (b) in the book: must be one of the main characters
>   Everything must be explained rationally
>   There is no place for detailed descriptions, nor for psychological
> analyses
>   With regard to information about the story, the following homology must
> be observed – author: reader = criminal: detective
>   Banal situations and solutions must be avoided.
>
> If an author adheres to the Golden Rules, s/he cannot reveal anything
> significant about the plot or identity of the criminal until at the end of
> the story.
>
> I am waiting to hear comments from other eminent Sherlockians regarding
> this.
>
>
> Thanking you,
>
> Yours sincerely,
>
> (Pinaki Roy)
>
>
>
>
>
>
> ---------------------------------
> Pinpoint customers who are looking for what you sell.
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

#2343 From: pinaki roy <monkaroy@...>
Date:: Wed Jul 25, 2007 6:13 pm
Subject:: Rules of Detective Fiction
monkaroy
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
Dear Sherlockians,


   Having had read Arun’s and Tim's letter regarding the detective fiction
authors' not giving a clue to what is rally going to happen, I feel that here we
may as well remember the Twenty Golden Rules of Detective Fiction that S.S.Van
Dine proposed in 1928. Almost all of these were followed by Arthur Conan Doyle
in his Sherlock Holmes stories.

                                                     Tzvetan Todorov thus sums up
in “The Typology of Detective Fiction” (included in “The Murder of Roger
Ackroyd: A Collection of Critical Essays”. Ed. Nilanjana Gupta. New Delhi:
Worldview, 2001. Pp. 50-1) the twenty rules of detective fiction writing:


    The novel must have at most one detective and one criminal, and at least one
victim (a corpse)
    The culprit must not be a professional criminal, must not be the detective,
and must kill for personal reasons
    Love has no place in detective fiction
    The culprit must have a certain importance – (a) in life: not be a butler or
a chambermaid  (b) in the book: must be one of the main characters
    Everything must be explained rationally
    There is no place for detailed descriptions, nor for psychological analyses
    With regard to information about the story, the following homology must be
observed – author: reader = criminal: detective
    Banal situations and solutions must be avoided.

   If an author adheres to the Golden Rules, s/he cannot reveal anything
significant about the plot or identity of the criminal until at the end of the
story.

   I am waiting to hear comments from other eminent Sherlockians regarding this.


   Thanking you,

   Yours sincerely,

   (Pinaki Roy)






---------------------------------
Pinpoint customers who are looking for what you sell.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

#2342 From: "Tim Symonds" <tim.symonds@...>
Date:: Tue Jul 24, 2007 10:32 am
Subject:: RE: [sherlock holmes society of india] Re: Digest Number 884
tim.symonds@...
Send Email Send Email
 
Arun's point about authors playing it fair with the reader is a good one.
There is a lot of detective fiction where the reader really has no chance of
guessing ahead of the denouement who is the crook or killer.  When I was
around 15 I was in Dorset in the west of England and I was given sixpence
each Sunday to go to Sunday School.  Instead of attending the Sunday School
I would buy a threepenny 'horror' - a single story of about 75 pages - and
pay a further thruppence to sit on the Weymouth Pier while the band played
and I read the story.  I still remember a Sherlock Holmes where there were
no real clues all the way through the plot until the very last page where
Holmes took Watson (with his Webley pistol, was it?) to an attic and they
sat there in the dark, waiting.  At midnight a figure appeared at the
skylight and when he jumped down into the attic he was arrested by Watson.
Holmes then declared this was the brother of the victim.  The crooked
brother had long since gone to Australia but had returned to bump off his
brother and thereby inherit money.  There was absolutely no indication all
through the plot that a brother existed.

Poor writing.
   _____

From: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
[mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...] On Behalf Of
arun.pkumar@...
Sent: 23 July 2007 17:50
To: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
Subject: [sherlock holmes society of india] Re: Digest Number 884


Ok. Here goes:

I'm a 28 year old male S/W Engineer from Bangalore. My hobbies include
reading, travelling & photography. I started off crime fiction with Agatha
Christie when I was only 15 yrs old and have been hooked to it ever since.
After finishing off the complete collections of Christie, Erle Stanley
Gardner & Conan Doyle, it was time to explore other authors. I started
concentrating on the authors who were flourishing in the period known as the
Golden Age of Detective Fiction. The books published during this time - they
were all of a very high calibre with tightly knit intricate plots and at the
same time playing very fair with the readers. In the sense that all the
clues were given to the reader and the reader could arrive at the identity
of the murderer through a very logical reasoning process and understanding
of the clues. Ellery Queen and John Dickson Carr were the greatest exponents
of this art. It's this thrill of arriving at the murderer - outguessing the
author- which hooked the people of the Victorian era and which certainly
made me get hooked to it. I next went on a massive hunt for the books which
were written during this period - as many are out of print and certainly out
of publication in India! Over the span of last 6 years I've visited some of
the best second hand book stores throughout India - where one can find the
books written by these authors and to this day I've a collection of around
300 books. Of these 300, my focus has been mainly on the 2 authors that I've
mentioned above and till date I've 35 of the 42 odd Ellery Queen novels but
John Dickson Carr has been more elusive in the sense that I've only around
18 out of the 100 odd books he wrote! The hunt is still on. For those who
need an introduction to the golden age of detective fiction, I'd suggest the
link http://home. <http://home.aol.com/MG4273/classics.htm>
aol.com/MG4273/classics.htm

That's it from me. Would like to hear from the other members who have
similar tastes.

/Arun.


>Dear Arun,
>Welcome aboard. Please introduce yourself and keep on posting
>informative posts like that.
>Sumalsn

The information contained in this electronic message and any attachments to
this message are intended for the exclusive use of the addressee(s) and may
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the intended recipient, you should not disseminate, distribute or copy this
e-mail. Please notify the sender immediately and destroy all copies of this
message and any attachments.

WARNING: Computer viruses can be transmitted via email. The recipient should
check this email and any attachments for the presence of viruses. The
company accepts no liability for any damage caused by any virus transmitted
by this email.

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[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

#2341 From: <arun.pkumar@...>
Date:: Mon Jul 23, 2007 4:49 pm
Subject:: Re: Digest Number 884
piorot13
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
Ok. Here goes:

I'm a 28 year old male S/W Engineer from Bangalore. My hobbies include  reading,
travelling & photography. I started off crime fiction with Agatha Christie when
I was only 15 yrs old and have been hooked to it ever since. After finishing off
the complete collections of Christie, Erle Stanley Gardner & Conan Doyle, it was
time to explore other authors. I started concentrating on the authors who were
flourishing in the period known as the Golden Age of Detective Fiction. The
books published during this time - they were all of a very high calibre with
tightly knit intricate plots and at the same time playing very fair with the
readers. In the sense that all the clues were given to the reader and the reader
could arrive at the identity of the murderer through a very logical reasoning
process and understanding of the clues. Ellery Queen and John Dickson Carr were
the greatest exponents of this art. It's this thrill of arriving at the murderer
- outguessing the author- which hooked the people of the Victorian era and which
certainly made me get hooked to it. I next went on a massive hunt for the books
which were written during this period - as many are out of print and certainly
out of publication in India! Over the span of last 6 years I've visited some of
the best second hand book stores throughout India - where one can find the books
written by these authors and to this day I've a collection of around 300 books.
Of these 300, my focus has been mainly on the 2 authors that I've mentioned
above and till date I've 35 of the 42 odd Ellery Queen novels but John Dickson
Carr has been more elusive in the sense that I've only around 18 out of the 100
odd books he wrote! The hunt is still on. For those who need an introduction to
the golden age of detective fiction, I'd suggest the link
http://home.aol.com/MG4273/classics.htm

That's it from me. Would like to hear from the other members who have similar
tastes.

/Arun.


>Dear Arun,
>Welcome aboard. Please introduce yourself and keep on posting
>informative posts like that.
>Sumalsn



The information contained in this electronic message and any attachments to this
message are intended for the exclusive use of the addressee(s) and may contain
proprietary, confidential or privileged information. If you are not the intended
recipient, you should not disseminate, distribute or copy this e-mail. Please
notify the sender immediately and destroy all copies of this message and any
attachments.

WARNING: Computer viruses can be transmitted via email. The recipient should
check this email and any attachments for the presence of viruses. The company
accepts no liability for any damage caused by any virus transmitted by this
email.

www.wipro.com

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

#2340 From: "Tim Symonds" <tim.symonds@...>
Date:: Mon Jul 23, 2007 8:21 am
Subject:: RE: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884
tim.symonds@...
Send Email Send Email
 
This is wonderful information and many thanks to Arun for sending it.  I
like the idea of Trincomalee at the end of the information - there is a now
nearly overgrown British cemetery near the waterfront in Trincomalee which
could perhaps figure in any Sherlock produced by the Society?  It is filled
with the graves of young British sailors who died of cholera and other
diseases in the 18th and 19th Centuries.



From: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
[mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...] On Behalf Of
arun.pkumar@...
Sent: 23 July 2007 04:28
To: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
Subject: RE: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884


My mail came up blank - maybe becoz of the attachments. Adding links in
the mail instead of the attachemnts.

I joined this group just a few days back and am yet to go through the
previous mails. Saw these recent mails and thought I'd reply to this
one.

Holmes, while explaining his disappearance to Watson describes thus:

"I travelled for two years in Tibet, therefore, and amused myself by
visiting Lhassa, and spending some days with the head lama. You may have
read of the remarkable explorations of a Norwegian named Sigerson, but I
am sure that it never occurred to you that you were receiving news of
your friend. I then passed through Persia, looked in at Mecca, and paid
a short but interesting visit to the Khalifa at Khartoum the results of
which I have communicated to the Foreign Office. Returning to France, I
spent some months in a research into the coal-tar derivatives, which I
conducted in a laboratory at Montpellier, in the south of France."

There have been a lot of books & Anthlogies that feature Holmes in all
these places.

JAMYANG NORBU's The Mandala of Sherlock Holmes which came out in 2000,
follows Holmes from north across the hot and dusty plains of India to
Simla, summer capital of the British Raj, and over the high passes to
the vast emptiness of the Tibetan plateau & Lhasa.

Anne Jordan's "I Looked in at Mecca" gives an insight into Sherlock
Holmes' visit to Mecca. It also has an illustrated pamphlet with a map
of Holmes' route from Baghdad.

Jake & Luke Thoene's THE JEWELLED PEACOCK OF PERSIA should reflect
Holmes Explots in Persia.

I've attached a word document titled "A Norwegian named Sigerson" to
shed some light on Holmes reference to Sigerson in the above paragraph.
The link is:
www.msi.vxu.se/users/nivre/sps/sigerson.html

Have also attached a PDF file titled "SH in Khartoum" - an article by
Margaret Nydell giving a brief overvire of Holmes Escapades in the
countires of Egypt &
Sudan though the 2 years refreed to by Nydel is different from the 2
years hiatus of SH which we are concerned with. Here is the link:
www.bakerstreetjournal.com/images/SH%20in%20Khartoum%20-%20Nydell.pdf

The Annotated Sherlock Holmes by Arthur Conan Doyle edited by William S.
Baring-Gould must be the best book to have shed light of this very
mysterious period.Here is an extract from the net:

In the over 1500 pages of The Annotated Sherlock Holmes are over a
hundred pages of introductory material, informative and entertaining in
its own right. There is interstitial discussion amounting to some forty
pages, on topics ranging from poisonous snakes to chronological
disputes.
Two of these analyses are:
The situation of Holmes after his use of ju-jitsu at the Reichenbach
Falls disappearance, perhaps including visits to Lhassa, Mecca, and
Khartoum before Watson's reunion with Holmes as a disguised bookseller
in Kensington in 1894;
and
Dr. Watson's wounding on Army service in Afghanistan in 1880, described
with apparent contradiction in different stories.

Trincomalee (Sri Lanka) is a new one.Yet to be explored. Would love to
hear more about the same from other members.

/Arun.

________________________________

From: SherlockHolmesSocie
<mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia%40yahoogroups.co.in>
tyofIndia@...
[mailto:SherlockHolmesSocie
<mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia%40yahoogroups.co.in>
tyofIndia@...] On Behalf Of
Nikhil Prasad Ojha
Sent: Sunday, July 22, 2007 10:16 PM
To: SherlockHolmesSocie
<mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia%40yahoogroups.co.in>
tyofIndia@...
Subject: Re: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884

He spent time in Trincomalee (Sri Lanka) and Lhasa (Tibet), as far as I
remember. And of course, the Mandala of Sherlock Holmes is perhaps the
best
of the pastiches that I have read.
Nikhil

On 7/22/07, Tim Symonds <tim.symonds@ <mailto:tim.symonds%40shevolution.com>
shevolution.com
<mailto:tim.symonds%40shevolution.com> > wrote:
>
> Ideally from the Society's point of view the plot should bring
Sherlock
> Holmes out to South Asia, perhaps with Dr Watson showing him his old
> military posts. I can't recall but when Holmes reappeared to
everyone's
> surprise after his apparent death at the Falls, didn't he say he had
spent
> several years in South Asia - was it Afghanistan, or?
> _____
>
>

.

<http://geo.yahoo.
<http://geo.yahoo.com/serv?s=97490481/grpId=5894845/grpspId=1720019661/m>
com/serv?s=97490481/grpId=5894845/grpspId=1720019661/m
sgId=2336/stime=1185122763/nc1=4096938/nc2=4096940/nc3=4026935>


The information contained in this electronic message and any attachments to
this message are intended for the exclusive use of the addressee(s) and may
contain proprietary, confidential or privileged information. If you are not
the intended recipient, you should not disseminate, distribute or copy this
e-mail. Please notify the sender immediately and destroy all copies of this
message and any attachments.

WARNING: Computer viruses can be transmitted via email. The recipient should
check this email and any attachments for the presence of viruses. The
company accepts no liability for any damage caused by any virus transmitted
by this email.

www.wipro.com

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

#2339 From: sumalsn
Date:: Mon Jul 23, 2007 7:47 am
Subject:: Re: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884
sumalsn
Offline Offline
 
Dear Arun,
Welcome aboard. Please introduce yourself and keep on posting
informative posts like that.
Sumalsn

#2338 From: <arun.pkumar@...>
Date:: Mon Jul 23, 2007 3:28 am
Subject:: RE: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884
piorot13
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
My mail came up blank - maybe becoz of the attachments. Adding links in
the mail instead of      the attachemnts.

I joined this group just a few days back and am yet to go through the
previous mails. Saw these recent mails and thought I'd reply to this
one.

Holmes, while explaining his disappearance to Watson describes thus:

"I travelled for two years in Tibet, therefore, and amused myself by
visiting Lhassa, and spending some days with the head lama. You may have
read of the remarkable explorations of a Norwegian named Sigerson, but I
am sure that it never occurred to you that you were receiving news of
your friend. I then passed through Persia, looked in at Mecca, and paid
a short but interesting visit to the Khalifa at Khartoum the results of
which I have communicated to the Foreign Office. Returning to France, I
spent some months in a research into the coal-tar derivatives, which I
conducted in a laboratory at Montpellier, in the south of France."

There have been a lot of books & Anthlogies that feature Holmes in all
these places.

JAMYANG NORBU's The Mandala of Sherlock Holmes which came out in 2000,
follows Holmes from north across the hot and dusty plains of India to
Simla, summer capital of the British Raj, and over the high passes to
the vast emptiness of the Tibetan plateau & Lhasa.

Anne Jordan's "I Looked in at Mecca" gives an insight into Sherlock
Holmes' visit to Mecca. It also has an illustrated pamphlet with a map
of Holmes' route from Baghdad.

Jake & Luke Thoene's THE JEWELLED PEACOCK OF PERSIA should reflect
Holmes Explots in Persia.

I've attached a word document titled "A Norwegian named Sigerson" to
shed some light on Holmes reference to Sigerson in the above paragraph.
The link is:
www.msi.vxu.se/users/nivre/sps/sigerson.html

Have also attached a PDF file titled "SH in Khartoum" - an article by
Margaret Nydell giving a brief overvire of Holmes Escapades in the
countires of Egypt &
Sudan though the 2 years refreed to by Nydel is different from the 2
years hiatus of SH which we are concerned with. Here is the link:
www.bakerstreetjournal.com/images/SH%20in%20Khartoum%20-%20Nydell.pdf

The Annotated Sherlock Holmes by Arthur Conan Doyle edited by William S.
Baring-Gould must be the best book to have shed light of this very
mysterious period.Here is an extract from the net:

In the over 1500 pages of The Annotated Sherlock Holmes are over a
hundred pages of introductory material, informative and entertaining in
its own right. There is interstitial discussion amounting to some forty
pages, on topics ranging from poisonous snakes to chronological
disputes.
Two of these analyses are:
The situation of Holmes after his use of ju-jitsu at the Reichenbach
Falls disappearance, perhaps including visits to Lhassa, Mecca, and
Khartoum before Watson's reunion with Holmes as a disguised bookseller
in Kensington in 1894;
and
Dr. Watson's wounding on Army service in Afghanistan in 1880, described
with apparent contradiction in different stories.

Trincomalee (Sri Lanka) is a new one.Yet to be explored. Would love to
hear more about the same from other members.

/Arun.


________________________________

From: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
[mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...] On Behalf Of
Nikhil Prasad Ojha
Sent: Sunday, July 22, 2007 10:16 PM
To: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
Subject: Re: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884



He spent time in Trincomalee (Sri Lanka) and Lhasa (Tibet), as far as I
remember. And of course, the Mandala of Sherlock Holmes is perhaps the
best
of the pastiches that I have read.
Nikhil

On 7/22/07, Tim Symonds <tim.symonds@...
<mailto:tim.symonds%40shevolution.com> > wrote:
>
> Ideally from the Society's point of view the plot should bring
Sherlock
> Holmes out to South Asia, perhaps with Dr Watson showing him his old
> military posts. I can't recall but when Holmes reappeared to
everyone's
> surprise after his apparent death at the Falls, didn't he say he had
spent
> several years in South Asia - was it Afghanistan, or?
> _____
>
>

.

<http://geo.yahoo.com/serv?s=97490481/grpId=5894845/grpspId=1720019661/m
sgId=2336/stime=1185122763/nc1=4096938/nc2=4096940/nc3=4026935>




The information contained in this electronic message and any attachments to this
message are intended for the exclusive use of the addressee(s) and may contain
proprietary, confidential or privileged information. If you are not the intended
recipient, you should not disseminate, distribute or copy this e-mail. Please
notify the sender immediately and destroy all copies of this message and any
attachments.

WARNING: Computer viruses can be transmitted via email. The recipient should
check this email and any attachments for the presence of viruses. The company
accepts no liability for any damage caused by any virus transmitted by this
email.

www.wipro.com

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

#2336 From: "Nikhil Prasad Ojha" <npojha@...>
Date:: Sun Jul 22, 2007 4:46 pm
Subject:: Re: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884
nikhilprasad...
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
He spent time in Trincomalee (Sri Lanka) and Lhasa (Tibet), as far as I
remember. And of course, the Mandala of Sherlock Holmes is perhaps the best
of the pastiches that I have read.
Nikhil

On 7/22/07, Tim Symonds <tim.symonds@...> wrote:
>
> Ideally from the Society's point of view the plot should bring Sherlock
> Holmes out to South Asia, perhaps with Dr Watson showing him his old
> military posts.  I can't recall but when Holmes reappeared to everyone's
> surprise after his apparent death at the Falls, didn't he say he had spent
> several years in South Asia - was it Afghanistan, or?
> _____
>
> From: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
> [mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...] On Behalf Of
> sumalsn
> Sent: 15 July 2007 04:13
> To: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
> Subject: Re: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884
>
> Dear Tim and Holmesians,
> It may be made more contemporary- Probably we may think of using
> current events as the background!
> sumalsn
>
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

#2335 From: "Tim Symonds" <tim.symonds@...>
Date:: Sun Jul 22, 2007 12:17 pm
Subject:: RE: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884
tim.symonds@...
Send Email Send Email
 
Ideally from the Society's point of view the plot should bring Sherlock
Holmes out to South Asia, perhaps with Dr Watson showing him his old
military posts.  I can't recall but when Holmes reappeared to everyone's
surprise after his apparent death at the Falls, didn't he say he had spent
several years in South Asia - was it Afghanistan, or?
   _____

From: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
[mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...] On Behalf Of sumalsn
Sent: 15 July 2007 04:13
To: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
Subject: Re: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884

Dear Tim and Holmesians,
It may be made more contemporary- Probably we may think of using
current events as the background!
sumalsn



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

#2334 From: "Tim Symonds" <tim.symonds@...>
Date:: Sat Jul 21, 2007 9:52 am
Subject:: RE: [sherlock holmes society of india] writing a sherlock
tim.symonds@...
Send Email Send Email
 
Today is the day millions of copies of the new JK Rowling are flying around
the world. A copy was delivered by special delivery at 7 this morning here,
deep in the English countryside.  It still amazes me anyone can make a
billion pounds from writing fairy-tales!  To me it’s a fairy-tale of human
fortitude – she was a penniless person in Scotland desperate to get enough
money to live on and she was allowed by a distant relative to sit in their
café for hours every day over a cup of tea writing the first Harry Potter.
When she had completed the first story, she found it very difficult to get a
publisher, but the rest is history.
   _____

From: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
[mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...] On Behalf Of sumalsn
Sent: 21 July 2007 07:46
To: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
Subject: Re: [sherlock holmes society of india] writing a sherlock

Dear Holmesians,
I suppose Ms JK Rowling would have been a good choice. She is expected
to be free too!
Sumalsn



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

#2333 From: sumalsn
Date:: Sat Jul 21, 2007 6:46 am
Subject:: Re: [sherlock holmes society of india] writing a sherlock
sumalsn
Offline Offline
 
Dear Holmesians,
I suppose Ms JK Rowling would have been a good choice. She is expected
to be free too!
Sumalsn

#2332 From: sumalsn
Date:: Sun Jul 15, 2007 1:08 pm
Subject:: Re: [sherlock holmes society of india] writing a sherlock
sumalsn
Offline Offline
 
Dear Sri and Holmesians,
I suppose a new James Bond novel is being written by Sebastian
Faulks.I think the Estate of Sir ACD should commission a well known
authour to write a new novel on SH
Sumalsn

#2331 From: sridhar C <cs_gollum@...>
Date:: Sun Jul 15, 2007 8:18 am
Subject:: Re: [sherlock holmes society of india] writing a sherlock
cs_gollum
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
LOL. There's always someone who has done it before. Like Holmes says, there's
nothing new under the sun. Well, we could still give it a try. More than just 6
chapters though.


   Sridhar

Tim Symonds <tim.symonds@...> wrote:
           Back in the 1960s or 1970s a group of about 6 people in New York wrote
a
novel together and I think it sold well, possibly because of the publicity
it achieved. In that instance I think each person wrote a chapter.


_____

From: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
[mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...] On Behalf Of sridhar
C
Sent: 12 July 2007 04:14
To: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
Subject: Re: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884

Dear Sumal and SHians,

Actually I was thinking more on the lines of a novelette, if not a novel. A
collaboration of at least 10-11 Holmesians. LOL, we could even be an entry
in the Guiness Books. We could think of printing once the writing was done.

"It's never been done before," as Danny Ocean says, and it could work.

Sridhar

sumalsn <no_reply@yahoogroup <mailto:no_reply%40yahoogroups.co.in> s.co.in>
wrote:
Dear Tim and Holmesians,
There are not many National level magazines/ Newspapers who publish
short stories of Amateurs nowadays. I remember " Mirror " of the Blitz
group used to publish a few.So I think one has to publish a book on
Holmes in India on his own accord.
Sumalsn

---------------------------------
Don't pick lemons.
See all the new 2007 cars at Yahoo! Autos.

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---------------------------------
Sick sense of humor? Visit Yahoo! TV's Comedy with an Edge to see what's on,
when.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

#2330 From: sumalsn
Date:: Sun Jul 15, 2007 3:13 am
Subject:: Re: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884
sumalsn
Offline Offline
 
Dear Tim and Holmesians,
It may be made more contemporary- Probably we may think of using
current events as the background!
sumalsn

#2329 From: "Tim Symonds" <tim.symonds@...>
Date:: Fri Jul 13, 2007 11:18 am
Subject:: writing a sherlock
tim.symonds@...
Send Email Send Email
 
Back in the 1960s or 1970s a group of about 6 people in New York wrote a
novel together and I think it sold well, possibly because of the publicity
it achieved.  In that instance I think each person wrote a chapter.


   _____

From: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
[mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...] On Behalf Of sridhar
C
Sent: 12 July 2007 04:14
To: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
Subject: Re: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884

Dear Sumal and SHians,

Actually I was thinking more on the lines of a novelette, if not a novel. A
collaboration of at least 10-11 Holmesians. LOL, we could even be an entry
in the Guiness Books. We could think of printing once the writing was done.

"It's never been done before," as Danny Ocean says, and it could work.


Sridhar

sumalsn <no_reply@yahoogroup <mailto:no_reply%40yahoogroups.co.in> s.co.in>
wrote:
Dear Tim and Holmesians,
There are not many National level magazines/ Newspapers who publish
short stories of Amateurs nowadays. I remember " Mirror " of the Blitz
group used to publish a few.So I think one has to publish a book on
Holmes in India on his own accord.
Sumalsn

---------------------------------
Don't pick lemons.
See all the new 2007 cars at Yahoo! Autos.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

#2328 From: sridhar C <cs_gollum@...>
Date:: Thu Jul 12, 2007 3:14 am
Subject:: Re: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884
cs_gollum
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
Dear Sumal and SHians,

   Actually I was thinking more on the lines of a novelette, if not a novel. A
collaboration of at least 10-11 Holmesians. LOL, we could even be an entry in
the Guiness Books. We could think of printing once the writing was done.

   "It's never been done before," as Danny Ocean says, and it could work.


   Sridhar

sumalsn <no_reply@...> wrote:
           Dear Tim and Holmesians,
There are not many National level magazines/ Newspapers who publish
short stories of Amateurs nowadays. I remember " Mirror " of the Blitz
group used to publish a few.So I think one has to publish a book on
Holmes in India on his own accord.
Sumalsn






---------------------------------
Don't pick lemons.
See all the new 2007 cars at Yahoo! Autos.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

#2327 From: sumalsn
Date:: Wed Jul 11, 2007 1:46 pm
Subject:: Re: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884
sumalsn
Offline Offline
 
Dear Tim and Holmesians,
There are not many  National level magazines/ Newspapers who publish
short stories of Amateurs nowadays. I remember " Mirror " of the Blitz
group used to publish a few.So I think one has to publish a book on
Holmes in India on his own accord.
Sumalsn

#2326 From: sridhar C <cs_gollum@...>
Date:: Wed Jul 11, 2007 3:20 am
Subject:: RE: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884
cs_gollum
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
I was thinking more on the lines of Anarchists from today. Maybe give Holmes a
really long life (he drank the Elixir of Life when he was Sigersen in Potala!)
and let him deal with today's issues...


   Sridhar

Tim Symonds <tim.symonds@...> wrote:
           Sounds like a good idea from Sridhar. First there's have to be the
plot.
How about involving the Anarchists from those times?
_____

From: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
[mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...] On Behalf Of sridhar
C
Sent: 08 July 2007 04:43
To: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
Subject: RE: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884

I think Penguin would go for it. Also Oxford and Rupa. Of course, it would
have to be really good. What say we all contribute a bit? Make a sort of
hodge-podge?

Sridhar

Tim Symonds <tim.symonds@ <mailto:tim.symonds%40shevolution.com>
shevolution.com> wrote:
Dear Sumal and members, if any of us members writes a 'sherlock holmes'
story, which magazines in India might want to publish it?

_____

From: SherlockHolmesSocie
<mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia%40yahoogroups.co.in>
tyofIndia@...
[mailto:SherlockHolmesSocie
<mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia%40yahoogroups.co.in>
tyofIndia@...] On Behalf Of sumalsn
Sent: 07 July 2007 06:33
To: SherlockHolmesSocie
<mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia%40yahoogroups.co.in>
tyofIndia@...
Subject: Re: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884

Dear Nikhil and SHians,
Yup, there is asociety which brings railway enthusiasts with
Holmesians in England.
Sumalsn

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

---------------------------------
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(and love to hate): Yahoo! TV's Guilty Pleasures list.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]


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---------------------------------
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#2325 From: "Tim Symonds" <tim.symonds@...>
Date:: Mon Jul 9, 2007 7:16 am
Subject:: RE: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884
tim.symonds@...
Send Email Send Email
 
Sounds like a good idea from Sridhar.  First there's have to be the plot.
How about involving the Anarchists from those times?
   _____

From: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
[mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...] On Behalf Of sridhar
C
Sent: 08 July 2007 04:43
To: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
Subject: RE: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884

I think Penguin would go for it. Also Oxford and Rupa. Of course, it would
have to be really good. What say we all contribute a bit? Make a sort of
hodge-podge?


Sridhar

Tim Symonds <tim.symonds@ <mailto:tim.symonds%40shevolution.com>
shevolution.com> wrote:
Dear Sumal and members, if any of us members writes a 'sherlock holmes'
story, which magazines in India might want to publish it?

_____

From: SherlockHolmesSocie
<mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia%40yahoogroups.co.in>
tyofIndia@...
[mailto:SherlockHolmesSocie
<mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia%40yahoogroups.co.in>
tyofIndia@...] On Behalf Of sumalsn
Sent: 07 July 2007 06:33
To: SherlockHolmesSocie
<mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia%40yahoogroups.co.in>
tyofIndia@...
Subject: Re: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884

Dear Nikhil and SHians,
Yup, there is asociety which brings railway enthusiasts with
Holmesians in England.
Sumalsn

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

---------------------------------
We won't tell. Get more on shows you hate to love
(and love to hate): Yahoo! TV's Guilty Pleasures list.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

#2324 From: sridhar C <cs_gollum@...>
Date:: Sun Jul 8, 2007 3:43 am
Subject:: RE: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884
cs_gollum
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 
I think Penguin would go for it. Also Oxford and Rupa. Of course, it would have
to be really good. What say we all contribute a bit? Make a sort of hodge-podge?


   Sridhar

Tim Symonds <tim.symonds@...> wrote:
           Dear Sumal and members, if any of us members writes a 'sherlock
holmes'
story, which magazines in India might want to publish it?


_____

From: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
[mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...] On Behalf Of sumalsn
Sent: 07 July 2007 06:33
To: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
Subject: Re: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884

Dear Nikhil and SHians,
Yup, there is asociety which brings railway enthusiasts with
Holmesians in England.
Sumalsn


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]






---------------------------------
We won't tell. Get more on shows you hate to love
(and love to hate): Yahoo! TV's Guilty Pleasures list.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

#2323 From: "Tim Symonds" <tim.symonds@...>
Date:: Sat Jul 7, 2007 9:06 am
Subject:: RE: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884
tim.symonds@...
Send Email Send Email
 
Dear Sumal and members, if any of us members writes a 'sherlock holmes'
story, which magazines in India might want to publish it?


   _____

From: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
[mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...] On Behalf Of sumalsn
Sent: 07 July 2007 06:33
To: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
Subject: Re: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884

Dear Nikhil and SHians,
Yup, there is asociety which brings railway enthusiasts with
Holmesians in England.
Sumalsn



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

#2322 From: sumalsn
Date:: Sat Jul 7, 2007 5:32 am
Subject:: Re: [sherlock holmes society of india] Digest Number 884
sumalsn
Offline Offline
 
Dear Nikhil and SHians,
Yup, there is asociety which brings railway enthusiasts with
Holmesians in England.
Sumalsn

#2321 From: "Tim Symonds" <tim.symonds@...>
Date:: Mon Jul 2, 2007 11:52 am
Subject:: RE: [sherlock holmes society of india] Is Sherlock Holmes alive and well?
tim.symonds@...
Send Email Send Email
 
In case any members are in England on Sunday August 5 there is a performance
of The Hound of the Baskervilles, taking place within one of the UK’s most
evocative castles, Bodiam Castle.  For description of the setting see
http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/main/w-vh/w-visits/w-findaplace/w-bodiamcast
le.htm

The cost of entry is a fairly hefty Sterling £15 for adults, and you have to
bring your own folding chair, picnic and (because of the river nearby)
insect repellent!

Where would members set The Hound of the Baskervilles?




   _____

From: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
[mailto:SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...] On Behalf Of sumalsn
Sent: 19 March 2007 13:28
To: SherlockHolmesSocietyofIndia@...
Subject: [sherlock holmes society of india] Is Sherlock Holmes alive and
well?

Dear Holmesians,
Is Sherlock Holmes alive and well. To know more about that,visit-
http://www.digitalj
<http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/33197/Sherlock_Holmes_still_alive>
ournal.com/article/33197/Sherlock_Holmes_still_alive
_and_well_in_readers_minds.
Read and comment. I wonder whether anyone of our members have written
to 221B?
Sumalsn



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

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