Edited Peter Horrocks (2 results)

Language: English
Published by [London] : Sherlock Holmes Society of London 1991
- Softcover
Seller: Joseph Burridge Books, Dagenham, United KingdomJoseph Burridge Books
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Soft cover. Condition: New. vii, 83 pages. By 1991 the summer excursions of the Society had become something of a tradition and that year saw the Society spend a weekend in Winchester, a city that has excellent canonical credentials. As this handbook shows these credentials may be even stronger than hitherto imagined. During the… course of research it was possible to link the ancestry of Dr Watson with a sixteenth century Bishop of Winchester and, even more important, to conclude that Holmes had undoubtedly received his education at Winchester College. The title of the expedition and of the Handbook derives from part of the famous passage in The Bruce Partington Plans about Mycroft. It refers to the fact that three Winchester stories by chance refer respectively the metals copper, silver and (through Neil Gibson, the Gold King) gold.

The return of Sherlock Holmes : the handbook of The Sherlock Holmes Statue Festival, 21-26 September 1999
edited by Peter Horrocks and Richard Lancelyn Green ; with forewords by the Prince of Wales and the Prime Minister
Language: English
Published by [London] : Sherlock Holmes Society of London 1999
- Softcover
Seller: Joseph Burridge Books, Dagenham, United KingdomJoseph Burridge Books
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Soft cover. Condition: New. 87 pages : illustrations, map, portraits ; 30 cm. Putting up a statue of Sherlock Holmes marked a real coming of age for the Society. The long held dream of the Society to have an image of Holmes in or near Baker Street had become a reality. A six day Festival was organised and a Handbook produced. Do…uglas West was specially commissioned to paint a picture for the cover. The editors pulled off two major coups by getting Prince Charles and Tony Blair to write brief foreword (Charles has been a 'life long devotee of the great detective' and Tony Blair not to be outdone, says that 'The Great Detective is a great British institution'. Not surprisingly there is a fair amount about the statue and John Doubleday's account of his approach to creating the statue is fascinating. John also compares the impression of the image he wished to convey of Sherlock Holmes with that he attempted to achieve when recording the personality of Nelson Mandela. His articles are accompanied by many photographs recording the birth of the statue. Richard Lancelyn Green looks back at the history of the Baker Street statue discussion, while Akane Higashiyama and Gordon MacNeill recall the statues of Holmes that already adorn Karuizawa and Edinburgh respectively. Other highlights are pieces by Bernard Davies and Roger Johnson about the Underground and the trains that ran on its rails, and an up-to-date look at Baker Street then and now from Catherine Cooke.