Fire Storm is set in Edinburgh and to celebrate Macmillan Children's Books have teamed up with Scottish libraries to launch a Scottish Mystery Trail. To encourage people to visit their local library they are hiding codes in libraries across Scotland, during October, with librarians as the gatekeepers of the code. Once people have gained a code they enter them onto the Young Sherlock website to reveal whether they have won a variety of prizes including Young Sherlock books, keyrings, DVDs and - for one lucky person - an iPod touch. Libraries in Edinburgh, Glasgow and beyond are creating Young Sherlock displays and activities around the competition and hopefully while people are visiting the libraries they will pick up one of the Young Sherlock books too. Codes can be entered to win prizes until the end of November.
Showing posts with label Young Sherlock Holmes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Young Sherlock Holmes. Show all posts
Thursday, 6 October 2011
News: Young Sherlock Holmes Fire Storm and Scottish Libraries Mystery Trail
Last month I was really chuffed to be able to bring you a preview of the new Young Sherlock Holmes book by Andrew Lane, titled Fire Storm (if you have not yet seen it you can read the opening chapter here). The book is due out in the UK on the 7th October (tomorrow) and I am dying to read it. If you are based in Scotland then please read on as I have been passed some news by the nice people at Macmillan concerning an exciting competition they are holding:
Sunday, 18 September 2011
First Chapter Preview: Young Sherlock Holmes: Fire Storm by Andrew Lane
Last week I was doing one of my occasional trawls through Amazon to see what books were due to be published in the coming months and I spotted Fire Storm, the fourth instalment in Andrew Lane's brilliant Young Sherlock Holmes series. I loved the first three books, so noted the date down excitedly (7 October for those of you who are eagerly awaiting this book), and then spotted that it was listed as a hardback edition. Here in the UK the first three books have all been released as paperback editions only, unless like me you have been buying the special edition signed hardbacks from Goldsboro Books in London. I rattled off a quick email to Sally at Macmillan and she replied to confirm that this was indeed the case. Knowing I was a fan she then went on to ask me if I would like to feature a preview of the first chapter of Fire Storm here on The Book Zone. That's a little like asking if the Pope is Catholic and so, for your delectation, here is the first chapter of the new Young Sherlock Holmes book, and all I can say is: Yes, yes, yes! Mrs Eglantine! Yes! Is this the book where we finally start to discover a little more about the mysterious, and seemingly rather nasty, housekeeper at Holmes Manor?
Young Sherlock Holmes: Fire Storm by Andrew Lane
CHAPTER ONE
‘Stop it!’ Rufus Stone cried out. ‘You’re killing me!’
Sherlock lifted the bow from the violin strings. ‘Don’t be so melodramatic.’
‘I’m not being melodramatic – another few seconds of that and my heart would have leaped out of my throat and strangled me just to ensure that it didn’t have to experience that cat-squalling any more!’
Sherlock felt his confidence shrivel up like a dry autumn leaf. ‘I didn’t think it was that bad,’ he protested.
‘That’s the problem,’ Stone said. ‘You don’t know what the problem is. If you don’t know what the problem is, you can’t fix it.’
He rubbed the back of his neck and wandered away, obviously struggling to find a way to explain to Sherlock just what he was doing wrong. He was wearing a loose striped shirt with the sleeves roughly rolled up and a waistcoat that seemed to have come from a decent suit, but his trousers were rough corduroy and his boots were scuffed leather. He swung round to look at Sherlock for a moment, and there was a kind of wild bafflement in his face, along with what Sherlock realized with a sickening twist of his heart was disappointment.
Sherlock turned away, not wanting to see that expression in the face of a man he considered a friend as well as a kind of older brother.
He let his gaze roam around the room they were in – anywhere so that he didn’t have to look at Stone. They were in the attic of an old building in Farnham. Stone rented a room on the floor below, but his landlady had taken a shine to him and let him rehearse and practise his violin – and teach the one music student he had so far taken on – in the expansive attic area.
The space was large and dusty, with beams of sunlight penetrating through gaps in the tiles and forming diagonal braces that seemed to be holding the triangular roof up just as well as the wooden ones. The acoustics, according to Stone, were marginally worse than a hay barn, but considerably better than his room. There were boxes and trunks stacked around the low walls, and a hatchway off to one side that led down, via a ladder, to the upper landing. Navigating the ladder with a violin and bow clutched in one hand was tricky, but Sherlock liked the isolation of the attic and the sense of space.
One day, he thought, I will have my own place to live – somewhere I can retreat from the world and not be bothered. And I won’t let anyone else in.
Pigeons fluttered outside, blocking the sunlight momentarily as they roosted. Cold penetrated the attic from the street, fingers of frosty air finding their way through the spaces between the tiles.
He sighed. The violin felt heavy in his hand, and somehow clumsy, as if he had never picked one up before. The music stand in front of him held the score of a piece by Mozart – a violin transcription, according to Stone, of a famous aria called ‘The Queen of the Night’s Song’ from an opera called The Three Oranges. The black notes captured between the lines of the staves were, as far as Sherlock was concerned, like a code, but it was a code he had quickly worked out – a simple substitution cipher. A black blob on that line always meant a note that sounded like this – unless there was a small hash in front of it that raised it slightly to a ‘sharp’, or a small angular letter ‘b’ that lowered it slightly to a ‘flat’. A sharp or a flat was halfway towards the note either directly above or directly below the one he was playing. It was simple and easy to understand – so why couldn’t he turn the written music into something that Rufus Stone could listen to without wincing?
Sherlock knew he wasn’t progressing as quickly as Stone would have liked, and that irked him. He would have liked to have been able just to pick up the instrument and play it beautifully, first time and every time, but sadly life wasn’t like that. It should be, he thought rebelliously. He remembered feeling the same way about the piano that sat in his family home. He’d spent hours sitting at it, trying to work out why he couldn’t play it straight away. After all, the thing about a piano was its relentless logic: you pressed a key and a note came out. The same key led to the same note every time. All you had to do, surely, was remember which key led to which note and you should be able to play. The trouble was, no matter how hard he had thought about it, he had never been able to sit down and play the piano like his sister
could – flowing and beautiful, like a rippling stream.
could – flowing and beautiful, like a rippling stream.
Four strings! The violin only had four strings! How hard could it be?
‘The problem,’ Stone said suddenly, turning round and staring at Sherlock, ‘is that you are playing the notes, not the tune.’
‘That doesn’t make any sense,’ Sherlock responded defensively.
‘It makes perfect sense.’ Stone sighed. ‘The trees are not the forest. The forest is all of the trees, taken together, plus the undergrowth, the animals, the birds and even the air. Take all that away and you just have a load of wood – no feeling, no atmosphere.’
‘Then where does the feeling come from in music?’ Sherlock asked plaintively.
‘Not from the notes.’
‘But the notes are all that’s on the paper!’ Sherlock protested.
‘Then add something of your own. Add some emotion.’
‘But how?’
Stone shook his head. ‘It’s the small gaps you put in – the hesitations, the subtle emphases, the slight speedings up and slowings down. That’s where the feeling
lives.’
lives.’
Sherlock gestured at the music on the stand. ‘But that’s not written on there! If the composer wanted me to speed up or slow down then he would have written it on the music.’
‘He did,’ Stone pointed out, ‘in Italian. But that’s only a guide. You need to decide how you want to play the music.’ He sighed. ‘The problem is that you’re treating this like an exercise in mathematics, or grammar. You want all the evidence set out for you, and you think that your job is to put it all together. Music isn’t like that. Music requires interpretation. It requires you to put something of yourself in there.’ He hesitated, trying to find the right words. ‘Any performance is actually a duet between you and the composer. He’s given you the bulk, but you have to add the final ten per cent. It’s the difference between reading out a story and acting out a story.’ Seeing the forlorn expression on Sherlock’s face, he went on: ‘Look, have you ever seen the writer Charles Dickens reading one of his own stories to an audience? Try it sometime – it’s well worth the cost of a ticket. He does different voices for different characters, he throws himself around the stage, he speeds up at the exciting bits and he reads it as if he’s never seen it before and he’s just as keen as the audience to find out what happens. That is how you should play music – as if you’ve never heard it before.’ He paused and winced. ‘In a good way, I mean. The trouble is that you play music as if you’ve never heard it before and you’re trying to work it out as you’re going along.’
That was pretty much the way it was, Sherlock thought.
‘Should I give up?’ he asked.
‘Never give up,’ Stone rejoined fiercely. ‘Never. Not in anything.’ He ran a hand through his long hair again. ‘Perhaps I’ve been going at this the wrong way. Let’s take a different tack. All right, you approach music as if it’s a problem in mathematics – well, let’s look for musicians who write mathematics into their music.’
‘Are there any?’ Sherlock asked dubiously.
Stone considered for a moment. ‘Let’s think. Johann Sebastian Bach was well known for putting mathematical tricks and codes into his tunes. If you look at his Musical Offering there’s pieces in there which are mirror images of themselves. The first note and the last note are the same; the second note and the second from last note are the same; and so on, right to the middle of the
piece.’
piece.’
‘Wow.’ Sherlock was amazed at the audacity of the idea. ‘And it still works as music?’
‘Oh yes. Bach was a consummate composer. His mathematical tricks don’t detract from the music – they add to it.’ Stone smiled, realizing that he’d finally snagged Sherlock’s attention. ‘I’m not an expert on Bach by any means, but I understand there’s another piece by him which is built around some kind of mathematical sequence, where one number leads on to the next using some rule. It’s got an Italian name. Now, let’s try that Mozart again, but this time, as you’re playing it, I want you to bring back those feelings. Remember them, and let them guide your fingers.’
Sherlock raised the violin to his shoulder again, tucking it into the gap between his neck and his chin. He let the fingers of his left hand find the strings at the end of the neck. He could feel how hard his fingertips had become under Stone’s relentless tutelage. He brought the bow up and held it poised above the strings.
‘Begin!’ Stone said.
Sherlock gazed at the notes on the page, but rather than trying to understand them he let his gaze slide through them, looking at the page as a whole rather than each note as something individual. Looking at the wood, not the trees. He remembered from a few minutes before what the notes were, then took a deep breath and started to play.
The next few moments seemed to go past in a blur. His fingers moved from one string to the next, pressing them down to make the right notes, fractionally before his brain could send his fingers a signal to tell them what the right notes were. It was as if his body already knew what to do, freeing his mind to float above the music, looking for its meaning. He tried to think of the piece as if someone was singing it, and let his violin become the voice, hesitating on some notes, coming down heavily on others as if to emphasize their importance.
He got to the end of the page without even realizing.
‘Bravo!’ Stone cried. ‘Not perfect, but better. You actually persuaded me that you were feeling the music, not just playing it.’ He gazed over at the slanted rays of sunlight that penetrated the loft. ‘Let’s stop it there: on a high note, as it were. Keep practising your scales, but also I want you to practise individual notes. Play a sustained note in different ways – with sadness, with happiness, with anger. Let the emotion seep through into the music, and see how it changes the note.’
‘I’m . . . not good with emotion,’ Sherlock admitted in a quiet voice.
‘I am,’ Stone said quietly. ‘Which means I can help.’ He placed a hand on Sherlock’s shoulder for a moment and squeezed, then took it away. ‘Now be off with you. Go and find that American girl and spend some time with her.’
‘Virginia?’ His heart quickened at the thought, but he wasn’t sure if it was happiness or terror that made it speed up. ‘But—’
‘No buts. Just go and see her.’
‘All right,’ Sherlock said. ‘Same time tomorrow?’
‘Same time tomorrow.’
He threw the violin into its case and half climbed, half slid down the ladder to the upper landing, then thudded down the stairs to the ground floor. Stone’s landlady – a woman of about Stone’s own age, with black hair and green eyes – came out of the kitchen to say something as he ran past, but he didn’t catch what it was. Within seconds he was out in the crisp, cold sunlight.
Farnham was as busy as it ever was: its cobbled or muddy streets filled with people heading every which way on various errands. Sherlock paused for a moment, taking in the scene – the clothes, the postures, the various packages, boxes and bags that people were carrying – and tried to make sense of it. That man over there – the one with the red rash across his forehead. He was clutching a piece of paper in his hand as if his life depended on it. Sherlock knew that there was a doctor’s surgery a few minutes’ walk behind him, and a pharmacy just ahead. He was almost certainly heading to pick up some medicine after his consultation. The man on the other side of the road – good clothes, but unshaven and bleary-eyed, and his shoes were scuffed and muddy. A tramp wearing a suit donated by a church parishioner, perhaps? And what of the woman who passed by right in front of him, hand held up to push the hair from her eyes? Her hands looked older than she did – white and wrinkled, as if they had spent a long time in water. A washerwoman, obviously.
Was this what Rufus Stone had meant about seeing the wood instead of the trees? He wasn’t looking at the people as people, but seeing their histories and their possible futures all in one go.
For a moment Sherlock felt dizzy with the scale of what he was staring at, and then the moment was gone and the scene collapsed into a crowd of people heading in all directions.
‘You all right?’ a voice asked. ‘I thought you were goin’ to pass out there for a moment.’
Sherlock turned to find Matthew Arnatt – Matty – standing beside him. The boy was smaller than Sherlock, and a year or two younger, but for a second Sherlock didn’t see him as a boy, as his friend, but as a collection of signs and indications. Just for a second, and then he was Matty again – solid, dependable Matty.
‘Albert isn’t well then,’ he said, referring to the horse that Matty owned, and which pulled the narrowboat he lived on whenever he decided to change towns.
‘What makes you think that?’ Matty asked.
‘There’s hay in your sleeve,’ Sherlock pointed out. ‘You’ve been feeding him by hand. Usually you just let him crop the grass wherever he happens to be tied up. You wouldn’t feed a horse by hand unless you were worried he wasn’t eating properly.’
Matty raised an eyebrow. ‘Just because I sometimes likes to give ’im ’is grub,’ he said, ‘there’s no need to make a song an’ dance about it. Albert’s the closest thing to family I got.’ He shrugged, embarrassed. ‘So I likes to treat ’im sometimes wiv somethin’ special.’
‘Oh.’ Sherlock filed that away for later consideration. ‘How did you know I was here?’ he asked eventually.
‘I could hear you playing,’ Matty replied laconically. ‘The whole town could hear you playing. I think that’s why Albert’s off his food.’
‘Funny,’ Sherlock observed.
‘You want to go get some lunch? There’s plenty of stuff goin’ spare in the market.’
Sherlock thought for a moment. Should he spend some time with Matty, or go and see Virginia?
‘Can’t,’ he said, suddenly remembering. ‘My uncle said he wanted me back for lunch. Something about getting me to catalogue and index a collection of old sermons he recently obtained at an auction.’
‘Oh joy,’ Matty said. ‘Have fun with that.’ He smiled. ‘Maybe I could go and see Virginia instead.’
‘And maybe I could hang you upside down from a bridge with your head under water up to your nose,’ Sherlock replied.
Matty just gazed at him. ‘I was only jokin’,’ he said.
‘I wasn’t.’
Sherlock noticed that Matty’s gaze kept sliding away, down the road towards the market. ‘Go on,’ he said. ‘Go and pick up some bruised fruit and broken pies. I might see you later. Or tomorrow.’
Matty flashed a quick smile of thanks and scooted away, ducking and diving through the crowd until he was lost from sight.
Sherlock walked for a while along the road that led out of Farnham and towards his aunt and uncle’s house. Every time a cart came past he turned to look at the driver, but most of them avoided his gaze. He didn’t take it personally – he’d been doing this for long enough that he knew the success rate was around one in twenty carts. Eventually one of the drivers looked over at him and called: ‘Where you going, sonny?’
‘Holmes Manor,’ he shouted back.
‘They don’t take on casual labour.’
‘I know. I’m . . . visiting someone.’
‘Climb aboard then. I’m going past the main gates.’
As Sherlock threw his violin up the side of the still-moving cart and clambered up after it, falling into a deep mass of hay, he wondered why it was that he still didn’t like admitting where he lived. Perhaps he was worried that people might change their attitude if they knew that his family were part of the local land-owning gentry. It was so stupid, he thought, that something as simple as inheriting land and a house from your parents could set you apart from other people. When he grew up he would make sure that he never made social distinctions between people like that.
The cart clattered along the road for twenty minutes or so before Sherlock jumped off, calling a cheerful ‘Thanks!’ over his shoulder. He checked his watch. He had half an hour before luncheon: just enough time to wash and perhaps change his shirt.
Luncheon was, as usual, a quiet affair. Sherlock’s uncle – Sherrinford Holmes – spent his time balancing eating with reading a book and trying to move his beard out of the way of both his food and the text, while his aunt – Anna – spoke in a continuous monologue that covered her plans for the garden, how pleased she was that the two sides of the Holmes family appeared to be on speaking terms again, various items of gossip about local landowners and her hope that the weather in the coming year would be better than the one that had just passed. Once or twice she asked Sherlock a question about what he was doing or how he was feeling, but when he tried to answer he found that she had just kept on talking regardless of what he might say.
As usual.
As usual.
He did notice that Mrs Eglantine – the manor’s darkly glowering housekeeper – was conspicuous by her absence. The maids served the food with their customary quiet deference, but the black-clad presence who usually stood over by the window, half hidden by the light that streamed through, was missing. He wondered briefly where she was, and then realized with a flash of pleasure that he just didn’t care.
Sherlock finished his food faster than his aunt and uncle and asked if he could be excused.
‘Indeed you may,’ his uncle said without looking up from his book. ‘I have left a pile of old sermons on the desk in my library. I would be obliged, young man, if you could sort them into piles depending on their author, and then arrange the individual piles by date. I am attempting,’ he said, raising his eyes momentarily and gazing at Sherlock from beneath bushy brows, ‘to catalogue the growth and development of schisms within the Christian church, with particular reference to the recent creation of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in America. These sermons should prove very useful in that respect.’
‘Thank you,’ Sherlock said, and left the table.
Uncle Sherrinford’s library smelled of old, dry books, mildew, leather bindings and pipe tobacco. Sherlock felt the quietness as something almost physical as the door closed behind him: an actual pressure against his ears.
Sherrinford’s desk was piled high with loose papers of various sizes and thickness. Some were typed, some handwritten in various different styles; most were bound with ribbons or string. As he sat down, not without a tremor of nerves, in Sherrinford’s creaking leather chair, Sherlock realized with a sinking feeling in his heart that the piles were taller than he was, and blocked his view of the rest of the library. This was going to be a long and tedious task.
He set to it. The process was simple on the face of it – take a manuscript from the nearest pile, find out who wrote it and when and then place it on one of a number of separate piles on the floor behind him – but of course it wasn’t as straightforward as that. Some of the sermons didn’t have an author named anywhere in them, some weren’t dated, and some had neither date nor name. Sherlock realized quickly that he had to make his judgements based on other clues. Handwriting was one of them. Some of the sermons were obviously written by the same person, based on the jagged, spidery text, and Sherlock could happily place them all in one pile. Other sermons mentioned particular places – churches, usually – which meant he could place them in at least the same geographical area and thus probably assign them to the same person or group of people. After a while he realized that some of the typewritten sermons had the same characteristics – a faded n, a partially raised a – which suggested to him that they might have been typed on the same machine, so he put them together in a pile as well. He didn’t actually read the sermons in any detail – that would have wasted a lot of time that he couldn’t afford – but as he flicked through them looking for indications of ownership and date he still managed to pick up a smattering of details: the ebb and flow of life of the countryside, the unsatisfied yearning for the love of God, the detailed analysis of things that were, in the end, unknowable. He also thought he had an understanding of the characters of the men writing the sermons – one of them serious and dour, terrified of eternal hellfire, another wide-eyed at the beauty of God’s creation, a third focused on details and minutiae and completely missing the wider context. At least one, he thought, was a woman writing sermons for her husband to deliver.
All in all, the work kept him busy for a good hour or two, during which he remained undisturbed.
After a while he decided to take a break and stretch his aching back. He stood up and wandered away from the desk, amazed at the way the piles of papers didn’t seem to be any smaller despite the fact that he had some fourteen or fifteen other piles on the floor around the desk by now.
Sherlock found himself wandering along the shelves of his uncle’s books, letting his eyes idly scan the titles. For a while he wasn’t sure what he was looking for, or even if he was looking for anything at all, but then it occurred to him that he could check to see if his uncle had any books on Bach, or music in general. Maybe he could find out some details on the way composers used mathematics in their music. Although Sherrinford Holmes spent his time writing sermons and other religious tracts for vicars and bishops around the country, his library was more than just a repository of books on Christianity. He had a good selection of works on virtually every subject under the sun.
And, Sherlock reminded himself, Johann Sebastian Bach was a noted composer of religious music. He had certainly written a lot of material for the church organ, and Sherlock was fairly sure that he had seen the composer’s name attached to various hymns in the church hymnals at Deepdene School for Boys, as well as in the local church. It would make sense for a religious author to have books about Bach in his collection.
Sherlock moved deeper into the shadowy lines of bookcases, looking for anything to do with music. He was out of sight of the door when he heard it open. He assumed it was his uncle, and moved back towards the light to tell him how far the work had progressed, but when he emerged from the aisle between two bookcases he was just in time to see the black bustle of a crinoline skirt vanishing behind a case on the far side of the room.
Mrs Eglantine? What was she doing here?
She seemed to know exactly where she was going. Confused, Sherlock edged closer, keeping as quiet as he could. He wasn’t sure why, but he had a feeling that she was doing something covert, secretive, and didn’t want anyone to know. She certainly wasn’t dusting the bookshelves – that task was below her station, reserved for one of the parlour maids.
Sherlock looked around the edge of the bookcase, keeping most of his head and all of his body hidden. It was Mrs Eglantine. She was kneeling down about halfway along the row of shelves, her crinoline skirt spread out around her, pulling out whole handfuls of books and letting them fall to the carpet. A part of Sherlock’s mind winced to see the books so carelessly treated, some of them lying open with their pages bent or their spines creased. Once she had cleared them out she bent even further down, head close to the carpet, and scanned the space she had created. Whatever she was looking for wasn’t there. With a huff of disappointment she quickly stuffed the books back again, apparently not caring what order they had been in or whether she was putting them back upside down or back to front.
She gazed to her left, away from Sherlock. Alerted, he ducked back just as her head began to swing his way. He knew it was fanciful, but he could almost see the intensity of her gaze scorching the carpet and disturbing the dust.
He counted to twenty and looked back just as he heard an irregular thumping noise start up. Satisfied that she wasn’t being observed, she was sweeping another row of books, higher up this time, off their shelf and letting them fall to the floor. Again she looked carefully into the space before grimacing in disappointment and shoving the books back pell-mell.
‘How dare you enter my library!’ a voice cried. ‘Get out of here this instant!’
Sherlock looked up, shocked. There, at the other end of the line of bookcases, was Sherrinford Holmes. He must have come in quietly, without either Sherlock or Mrs Eglantine noticing.
Mrs Eglantine straightened up slowly. ‘You are a fool,’ she said, slowly and distinctly. ‘You have no authority in this house – not any more. I am in charge here.’
Monday, 27 June 2011
Review: Black Ice by Andrew Lane (Young Sherlock Holmes)
The year is 1868 and fourteen-year-old Sherlock Holmes faces his most baffling mystery yet. Mycroft, his older brother, has been found with a knife in his hand, locked in a room with a corpse. Only Sherlock believes that his brother is innocent. But can he prove it?
In a chase that will take him to Moscow and back, Sherlock must discover who has framed Mycroft and why . . . before Mycroft swings at the gallows.
It is no secret that I am a big fan of Andrew Lane's Young Sherlock Holmes books, and my reviews of the first two in the series have been pretty glowing. I know that this is a view that is not shared by all fans of Conan Doyle's classic stories, and some critics have (rightly) pointed out that Death Cloud and Red Leech were more action/adventure stories than mystery detection. With Black Ice Andrew Lane has surely begun to answer these critics, and in my opinion he has now developed the character enough in the previous two outings for this to be a realistic next step in the life of young Sherlock Holmes.
Black Ice is still a classic adventure story (it has to have these elemnts to appeal to today's young readers), but thanks to the tutelage of Amyus Crowe, our young hero is now in the position to use logic and deduction to draw his own conclusions when trying to get to the bottom of a mysterious event that could have a devastating effect on his family. For his brother Mycroft has been accused of committing a murder he has no recollection of doing, and we have here the beginnings of a classic locked room mystery. Mycroft is even discovered, knife in hand, by Sherlock and Amyus, and on the face of things all of the initial evidence points to him being guilty in the eyes of the men from Scotland Yard. However, Sherlock knows his brother well enough to find this incredulous, and with the assistance of Crowe he sets out to prove his brother innocent.
Andrew Lane likes to mix things up in these stories: Death Cloud was largely based in the UK (apart from a short visit across the Channel); Red Leech saw Sherlock heading off to the USA; and now in Black Ice a visit to Czarist Russia is on the cards for our young hero. Apart from giving Sherlock the wider view of the world and its people, this journey also takes him away from the influence of Amyus Crowe for a period of time, and instead puts him in the care of a very different mentor, a man who will already be familiar to those who have read Red Leech. Whilst Crowe is a man who teaches logic and deduction, this new mentor is a more unpredictable character and through his influence we start to see more of the other side of the character of Holmes, the person who although seeming cold and distant at times, actually has a deep rooted caring for the world and the afflicted people he comes across.
What I love most about Andrew Lane's Young Sherlock books is the way he is very slowly revealing to those of us who know and love the adult character, exactly how certain traits, mannerisms and peculiarities of the adult version came into being, and I am sure I am not the only reader who delights from trying to spot these moments as the story progresses. One such moment for me in Black Ice, although not particularly subtle, had me with a big smile on my face , as Sherlock, in despair at what he views to be the failings of Scotland Yard, angrily asks Crowe: "'Why isn't there someone who can investigate things that the police won't or can't investigate? Some kind of independent, consulting force of detectives who can set things straight, like the Pinkerton Agency in America that you told me about'". And the reply hs receives from Crowe: "'It would require someone with a whole set of interestin' qualities, that's for sure,' Crowe said with a strange expression on his face. 'But it's a career niche that is currently unoccupied here in England.'"
Three books in and this is a series I would love to see run and run, and in the interview that Andrew Lane did for The Book Zone some time ago he suggested it would be a series of nine books so there should still be plenty more exciting stories to come. The next book in the series, Fire Storm, is due out in October, and if these details are anything to go by it looks like it could be another cracker:
Fourteen-year-old Sherlock has come up against some challenges in his time, but what confronts him now is completely baffling. His tutor, Crowe, and Crowe's daughter, Ginny, have vanished. Their house looks as if nobody has ever lived there. Neighbours claim never to have heard of them.
Sherlock begins to doubt his sanity, until a chance clue points him to Scotland. Following that clue leads him into the throes of a mystery that involves kidnapping, bodysnatchers and a man who claims he can raise the dead. Before he knows it, Sherlock is fighting for his life as he battles to discover what has happened to his his friends.
My thanks go to Jessica Dean Publicity for sending me a copy of this book to review.
Friday, 12 November 2010
*** Red Leech Contest Result
The lucky winner of a copy of Red Leech by Andrew Lane is:
Cameron Bamber
Well done and thank you to the hundreds of you who entered. I will now endeavour to contact the winner through by email. Please reply within 48 hours or I will draw another name out of the hat. Many thanks to Macmillan for providing the prize.
(Note: all names were drawn randomly using a nifty little freeware programme called The Hat)
Cameron Bamber
Well done and thank you to the hundreds of you who entered. I will now endeavour to contact the winner through by email. Please reply within 48 hours or I will draw another name out of the hat. Many thanks to Macmillan for providing the prize.
(Note: all names were drawn randomly using a nifty little freeware programme called The Hat)
Monday, 8 November 2010
*** Contest: WIN a copy of Red Leech by Andrew Lane (Young Sherlock Holmes)
I recently posted a review of Red Leech, the second book in Andrew Lane's Young Sherlock Holmes series. Now, thanks to the generous people at Macmillan I have copy to give away to a reader of The Book Zone. In order to be in with a chance of winning a copy of this book all you have to do is answer the simple question and fill in your details on the form below.
The first name drawn at random after the closing date will win a copy of the book. Deadline for entries is 8pm Friday 12th November. This contest is open to UK residents only.
Contest open to UK residents only.
I will not be held responsible for items lost in the mail.
I hold the right to end a contest before its original deadline without any prior notice.
I hold the right to disqualify any entry as I see fit.
I will contact winning entrants for their postal address following the close of the competition. Winners have 48 hours to reply. Failure to do so in this time will result in another winner being randomly selected.
The first name drawn at random after the closing date will win a copy of the book. Deadline for entries is 8pm Friday 12th November. This contest is open to UK residents only.
Contest open to UK residents only.
I will not be held responsible for items lost in the mail.
I hold the right to end a contest before its original deadline without any prior notice.
I hold the right to disqualify any entry as I see fit.
I will contact winning entrants for their postal address following the close of the competition. Winners have 48 hours to reply. Failure to do so in this time will result in another winner being randomly selected.
Monday, 1 November 2010
Review: Red Leech by Andrew Lane (Young Sherlock Holmes)
Sherlock knows that Amyus Crow, his mysterious American tutor, has some dark secrets. But he didn't expect to find a notorious killer, hanged by the US government, apparently alive and well in Surrey - and Crow somehow mixed up in it. When no one will tell you the truth, sometimes you have to risk all to discover it for yourself. And so begins an adventure that will take Sherlock across the ocean to America, to the centre of a deadly web - where life and death are cheap, and truth has a price no sane person would pay . . .
Edit: I have a contest now running on my blog where you could WIN a copy of Red Leech. Contest closes on Friday 12th November - full details can be found here.
Anyone who read my review of Death Cloud, the first book in the Young Sherlock Holmes series from author Andrew Lane, will know that I am a huge Sherlock Holmes fan, and I loved that first outing. Taking on a task as huge as writing the back story for the world's most famous detective is bound to attract a lot of attention from die-hard fans, and I know that some of them have been somewhat critical of Mr Lane's efforts, stating that there was little of the Holmes power of deduction that they have come to know and love. I sometimes wonder how intelligent people can sometimes act so unintelligent when it comes to a subject they feel so strongly about: of course, the young Sherlock character is different from Conan Doyle's creation, he is after all only fourteen! Why can't these detractors look beyond this and spot the subtle details and experiences that Andrew Lane spread throughout his story that are the seeds from which the adult character will grow?
Hopefully, this minority of angry fan boys will be silenced by Red Leech, the second volume in these chronicles of the young Holmes as I feel it is even better than Death Cloud. Having met the character in that first book we are now given a chance to get to know him properly; this is often difficult in a first-in-series book for young readers who demand fast pace and regular action scenes, and so second-in-series books are all the more important when it comes to character development. Andrew Lane certainly rises to this challenge with Red Leech as we start to observe the genesis of some of the mannerisms and beliefs that are so well known in the full formed adult version. Some of these moments in the story are very subtle, some are far more obvious, but almost every one I spotted sent a small shiver of delight down my spine, and created a smug knowing grin on my face. Mr Lane also pays more attention to the legendary Holmes thought process in this book, as the young Sherlock reflects on things that he sees or events that happen. Not all of these minutiae are directly related to the adventure he finds himself on, but many of them demonstrate the birth of a very logical mind. We see him thinking about coded messages for the first time, and admiring "the logical processes that could be used to deconstruct them"; and we witness the dawning of a theory in his mind that the creation of an encyclopaedia of tattoos could be a useful tool in identifying people and solving crimes. These and many other such moments are what make this book even more enjoyable than the first.
Death Cloud was packed full of great action sequences, and the sequel is no different in this respect. Sherlock finds himself escaping from the jaws of certain death time after time as the story progresses, but unlike modern heroes such as Alex Rider he does not have gadgets to help him out of sticky situations, he has to rely purely on his own intelligence and desire to stay alive. He is of course aided in this by his good friends Matty and Virginia, although quite often the final life-saving decisions end up falling to Sherlock as he finds himself having to get all three of them out of perilous situations. In Red Leech we also see the growing bond between Sherlock and Virginia, although given the misogynistic views of the adult Holmes I fear that Andrew lane may be slowly setting his readers up for a big upset sometime on the future.
As in Death Cloud, we see Sherlock continuing to be tutored by the charismatic American, Amyus Crow. We also learn a little more about Crow's background and the reason he his living in England. The author ties this in with real events of 1860s America, revealing that Crow is an agent for the American government, sent to Britain to track down war criminals from the Civil War, a war that caused so many men to lose their lives at the beginning of that decade. We discover that John Wilkes Booth, the man who assassinated President Abraham Lincoln, is possibly alive and well and living in Surrey, rather than having been killed in 1865. This is the premise on which the rest of the plot is built, and in my opinion it works very well. It also sees Sherlock travelling across the Atlantic with Amyus Crow to help him track down Booth and his co-conspirators. Crow is the major influence on the young Sherlock and the development of his personality towards the adult character, but there were aspects of Holmes' character that haven't come from Crow, and so Mr Lane now also introduces us to Rufus Stone, a violin player whose voice holds "a slight Irish brogue". Yes, this is where we see Sherlock learn to play the violin for the first time, and I feel we will be seeing more of Stone in future outings.
Another similarity that this book has with its predecessor is a particularly nasty villain. Death Cloud brought us the deranged and deformed Baron Maupertuis, Red Leech introduces us to the just as deranged and deformed Duke Balthassar. I won't say much about this particularly evil man other than that he has a fondness for leeches, using them, on...... let your imaginations run wild at the thought of that! Some might say that the two Andrew Lane created villains we have seen so far are over the top but I love them, and so did the Victorians - their penny dreadfuls and other publications were full of them.
One part of the adult Holmes' character that we know so well his is overwhelming sense of what is right and what is wrong. I don't want to go into any detail here but there is a scene towards the end of the book where the young Sherlock finds himself having to agonise of the planned actions of others, actions he disagrees with despite these others being on the same side as him. I will not say what decision he comes to but it is a decision that will resonate with Holmes fans everywhere, and also reveals an early glimpse of the rebellious streak that lies at the heart of the adult Holmes.
I am not sure when the next instalment of the Young Sherlock Holmes series will be released, although I have it on good authority that it will be entitled Black Ice. Red Leech however is scheduled to be published on 5th November although I wouldn't be surprised if it is in a lot of stores already. My thanks go to Dom and Macmillan for sending me a copy to review.
Wednesday, 2 June 2010
*** Interview with Andrew Lane (author of Young Sherlock Holmes: Death Cloud)
Last month I posted a review of Death Cloud, the first book in Andrew Lane's new Young Sherlock Holmes series. Andrew is very busy promoting the book at the moment but kindly took time out to answer my rather long list of questions. I hope you enjoy reading this interview as much as I have.
The information from your publisher describes you as a “lifelong Sherlock Holmes fan” and that you have a “passion for the original novels of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle”. What is it about this character and these stories that so appeals to you?
When I was a kid I was tall and thin and a bit geeky, like Sherlock Holmes. I appreciated being able to read books in which the lead character relied on intelligence to get through, not on strength or agility, and who didn’t particularly want to make friends. As far as he was concerned, he had one good friend and that was enough. And he used to sleep a lot when he wasn’t on a case, which appealed to me. Now I’m much older, I’m huge and geeky, more like Mycroft Holmes. Sad, but true.
Do you have a favourite Conan Doyle Sherlock Holmes story?
I keep going back to ‘The Hound of the Baskervilles’, mainly for the atmosphere and for the fact that Watson spends quite a lot of his time investigating without Holmes around. And there’s that lovely image that Watson sees of a shadowy figure on top of one of the tors, gazing out into Dartmoor. I think it’s a wonderfully put together book.
How did you get the ‘job’ of writing these Young Sherlock books?
My agent – Robert Kirby, at United Agents – had been working with the Doyle family, and with their representative Jon Lellenberg in the USA, on the collected letters of Arthur Conan Doyle. During the course of discussions, Robert raised the idea of reviving Sherlock Holmes for a young adult audience. He is also, by the way, Anthony Horowitz’s agent, so he knows the ropes when it comes to the young adult market. Having got their blessing, he then came to me because he knew I loved the originals and that I’d always wanted to write a “real” Sherlock Holmes novel (we’ll ignore the ‘Doctor Who’ / ‘Sherlock Holmes’ crossover that I wrote some years back). I said yes straight away, and then spent the next few months writing a proposal setting out exactly what I wanted to do and three sample chapters. The family liked them, Robert liked them, and fortunately Jon Lelleberg liked them as well (and he was the man who could have torpedoed the whole thing, if he’d wanted to.
I hear there are approximately 387 Sherlock Holmes fan clubs worldwide, and I imagine a significant number of websites, blogs and Facebook groups dedicated to the character. Did you feel under a lot of pressure when writing Death Cloud?
Absolutely no pressure whatsoever, apart from the natural pressure any writer feels not to embarrass themselves. I had such a clear vision of what I wanted to do and to say, and of the essential fight for control of Sherlock’s soul that will form the core of the series, that I just had to let the words flow out as clearly as possible. And being a big Holmes buff myself, I knew I could put in enough obvious and subtle references that I could keep the fanbase happy. After all, I’ve done it with ‘Doctor Who’ successfully enough. I know how these things work. I know what I would want to read if I was the reader rather than the writer.
I imagine there are a large number of traditionalists out there who will be hostile towards the concept of a series of books about a teenage Sherlock Holmes. What do you have to say to these potential detractors who will take the idea very seriously?
Everyone is entitled to their opinion, of course, and I wouldn’t try to detract from anyone having their say. What I would point out is that if you accept that Sherlock Holmes as a “real” character then he must have had a childhood. Writing about that childhood is a valid thing to do, as long as it’s done consistently with what Conan Doyle wrote (e.g. no spurious appearances by Watson or Moriarty!) Having said all that, I did have my doubts about ‘Young Bond’ as a concept, but Charlie Higson pulled it off with style.
Will you be reading fan club sites and blogs to gauge reactions to Death Cloud?
I’ll be sneaking some looks, here and there. What I don’t want to do is get myself freaked by the criticism and just curl up into a ball. That wouldn’t be a good idea at all. But it’s always useful to see what people think works and doesn’t work.
There are obvious parallels to be drawn between Charlie Higson’s Young Bond series and your new series. Have you read any of the Young Bond books?
I have. I actually had to – I’d previously written ‘The Bond Files’ for Virgin Books – the complete guide to everything Bond in books, films, comics, computer games and everything else, so I’ve read virtually every James Bond product there is. I knew Charlie vaguely anyway, from when I wrote some tie-in material for ‘Randall and Hopkirk: Deceased’ some years back, and I was invited along to his launch party at the London Aquarium. He was invited to my launch party, but he was abroad in his palatial Italian villa. One day, I will have a palatial Italian villa. One day.
In one short paragraph how would you describe the 14 year-old Sherlock Holmes in Death Cloud?
He’s conflicted and he’s lonely. He doesn’t make friends easily – at least, he doesn’t think so – and he probably thinks too much.
Do you think your writing of this book was made easier or harder as a result of the fact that Conan Doyle gave very little away about his character’s early years?
I think it made it a lot easier. All we really know about Sherlock from Conan Doyle’s writings is (a) his family are descended from a line of local squires, (b) his mother’s side of the family are descended from the French Vernet family of artists, and (c) he has a brother named Mycroft. Everything else is pure speculation, which gave me tremendous freedom of manoeuvre. If Coann Doyle had written thousands of words about Sherlock’s early life then, frankly, there wouldn’t have been much point in me doing this series.
How did you go about researching this book?
The usual way – books, books and more books. I hunted on Amazon and EBay, in Waterstones and in remaindered bookshops, looking for stuff that would illuminate the era I was writing in (trains, canals, etc). I spent a while in Farnham library, going through their local history section. The Sherlock Holmes details I checked with ‘The Annotated Sherlock Holmes’, edited and annotated by William Baring-Gould, and also with Jack Tracey’s ‘Encyclopedia Sherlockiana’. And for details of the tunnel under the Thames at Rotherhythe I went back to a couple of books in my collection.
When Charlie Higson wrote his Young Bond books he had decided it would be a series of five, and also the point in Bond’s life that the series would go up to. Do you already have a plan of how many books there will be in your series? Up to what stage of Holmes’ life would you hope to cover?
In my mind, I’m thinking possibly nine books. Anything more than that might be pushing my luck, but you never know. I’ve got to get Sherlock through school years, and then (if allowed) through University. That would take him up to his early twenties, I suppose. So, maybe a book for every year of his life? I already know what the last line of the last book will be. It will be Sherlock, in the chemistry lab at St Bart’s Hospital, having only recently arrived in London, turning around and seeing a man standing in the doorway, and Sherlock says: “You have been in Afghanistan, I perceive.” The man is Doctor John Watson, of course, and this is the point where the Conan Doyle adventures start.
In order to become the man we know and love, Sherlock Holmes must have fallen under the influence of a number of ‘mentors’ in his formative years. You have created one of these mentors in the form of Amyus Crowe (I loved this character by the way). How did you go about creating this character?
If you look at Sherlock Holmes as a grown up (which I did a lot of), he’s obviously pulled in two different directions. On the one hand there’s the athletic, logical, detail-obsessed, deductive Sherlock, and on the other there’s the lazy, violin-playing, theatrical master of disguise. To me, this suggests that Sherlock as an impressionable kid fell under the spell of two mentors, each of whom tried to pull him in different directions, and that’s the underlying theme of the entire Young Sherlock Holmes series – a fight for control of Sherlock’s soul by two father-figures. Amyus Crowe is the first, and I based him partially on John Wayne in ‘True Grit’ but more on a character named Skua Spetember in Alan Dean Foster’s SF novel ‘Icerigger’ (which I thoroughly recommend to anyone). Amyus Crowe is a genial American from the deep South with a background in hunting and tracking, and he can teach Sherlock about the observation of small details. The second is named Rufus Stone, and he’s a violinist of gypsy descent who will turn up in the second book and will have a large part to play in the third. Amyus Crowe and Rufus Stone do not like each other, but they both treat Sherlock like a son.
This question contains spoliers - highlight with your cursor to read it: His Last Bow, chronologically the final Sherlock Holmes instalment by Conan Doyle, sees Holmes having retired to the countryside to keep bees. His interest in bees has never been explained until now. How did you decide on using bees as a plot feature in Death Cloud?
I wanted something that would link Sherlock at the beginning of his life with Sherlock at the end of his life. I like the idea of literary circles, where what goes around comes around, and people end up where they started. I knew that Sherlock Holmes eventually retires to keep bees, and you’re right – Doyle never explains why it should be bees, and not greyhounds or rabbits. So I decided that Sherlock should have a formative experience with bees at an early age in order to pique his interest. After that, the whole thing just wrote itself…
As I read Death Cloud I could see the germination of some of the character traits that we know in the adult Sherlock Holmes. Have you already decided which traits you are going to develop in each book of the series?
I know that Sherlock has to learn martial arts at some stage, which will probably mean going to Japan (one member of the Doyle family works extensively in Japan, and is very much in favour of this idea). He will have to learn the violin, which starts in Book 2 on a sea voyage to New York. He will have to take boxing and sword-fighting lessons, although I’ve already set up the fact that he knows he has to do that. And he’ll have to get involved with a theatrical troupe in order to perfect his later ability to disguise himself. Apart from that he’ll have to start stocking his brain with lots of detail about tattoos and tobaccos, and generally learn how to think rationally.
This question contains spoliers - highlight with your cursor to read it: Baron Maupertuis is one of the most fantastic and physically gruesome villains I have come across in YA literature – in which nightmare was the idea for this character born?
It’s hard to remember now, but I do know that the Baron was virtually the first thing that I developed for the story, before the plot and anything else. I just loved that vision of a man who was in one way controlled by shadowy people behind the scenes but in another way was controlling them. The original title for the book was ‘Shadow of the Marionette’ (before being changed to ‘The Colossal Schemes of Baron Maupertuis’ and then ‘Death Cloud’) Where the actual image came from I’m not sure. Somewhere in the depths of my mind I think it links back to the time that Justin Richards (‘The Invisible Detective’ and various ‘Doctor Who’ novels) and I were at university, and he was explaining the concept of the uber-marionette in theatre – the performer who would be completely subjugated to the will of the director. I think that’s where it came from. Justin had this theory that the script for the Walt Disney sci-fi movie ‘The Black Hole’ was a hidden exploration of the theory of the uber-marionette (the names of the main antagonist and of the main robot are, apparently dead give-aways).
Victoriana has become increasingly popular over the last few years with the rise in popularity of the steampunk genre. Have you read any books from this genre?
I’ve loved Steampunk ever since it started, which I would argue was with the triumvirate of Tim Powers (‘The Anubis Gates’), K.W.Jeter (‘Infernal Devices’ and ‘Morlock Nights’) and James Blaylock (‘Homunculus’). I think the genre has pretty much run out of steam (ha-hah!) now, but for a while it was probably the most interesting thing going.
Which actor portrays your favourite screen incarnation of Sherlock Holmes?
I flicker between Robert Stephens in ‘The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes’, for his vulnerability and his acerbic wit, and Christopher Plummer in ‘Murder by Decree’, for his humanity.
Have you seen the Robert Downey Jr Sherlock Holmes movie? If so, what did you think of it?
I loved the film. The script took little background elements from Conan Doyle (like the scene where Holmes describes the owner of a watch) and built them into something marvellous, and the film itself reverses the usual trick of having Holmes as the straight man and Watson as the bumbling comedy relief, and instead has Holmes as the comedy relief and Watson as the straight man. Very, very clever.
There have been many Sherlock Holmes novels written by a variety of authors since Conan Doyle died. Do you have any particular favourites?
Richard L. Boyer’s book ‘The Giant Rat of Sumatra’ has always been on my top ten list, as has Robert Lee Hall’s ‘Exit Sherlock Holmes’. Michael Hardwick’s ‘The Revenge of the Hound’ is an excellent novel. Michael Dibdin’s ‘The Last Sherlock Holmes Story’ is equally excellent, but very depressing. I also like Michael Kurland’s books about Sherlock’s arch-enemy Moriarty, in which Moriarty is a criminal but not as all-powerful as Sherlock thinks, and Sherlock seems to have become obsessed with trying to prove that Moriarty is responsible for every crime in London. The first of the books is ‘The Infernal Device’, and it’s well worth seeking out.
Have you ever considered writing an adult Sherlock Holmes novel or are you happy sticking to the YA market?
I’ve always had plans to write an adult Sherlock Holmes novel, but now that I’m writing Young Sherlock Holmes I’d like to write a book about a grown-up Sherlock living in London with John Watson, but bringing in characters and events from the YA series. Perhaps the return of Baron Maupertuis – who knows?
A number of books by the likes of Charlie Higson and Anthony Horowitz have been adapted into graphic novel format, as have a number of Holmes stories. Have you read any of Edginton and Culbard’s Sherlock Holmes graphic novels, and how would you feel if Death Cloud was given a similar treatment?
Graphic novel adaptations of books are a bit of an odd cross-breed, I’ve always thought. The way one structures the plot is different, and while books give you insights into what the characters are thinking graphic novels are entirely focussed on what things look like and the expressions on people’s faces. I’d far rather write an original story to be done as a graphic novel (if any publishers are reading this – please remember what I’ve said!) And my choice of artist would be Mike Collins, who I’ve shared convention bar space with on several occasions.
Apart from Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, who are your greatest literary influences?
The writers I keep going back to are Tim Powers (the virtual inventor of Steampunk), Jonathan Carroll (the master of the gripping first line and the amazing twist), Stephen Gallagher (a supreme master of construction and of building character) and David Morrell (for the way he builds tension and has his protagonists spending as much time fighting the landscape as fighting the enemy). Strangely, I’ve just been rereading a lot of Larry Niven’s SF, and I’m quite surprised how much what I’m doing now is similar to what he was doing back in the 1970s and early 1980s. I must have read him originally at an impressionable age.
What books/authors did you read when you were younger?
Lots of stuff. Tons of stuff. I’ve actually acknowledged in the front of ‘Death Cloud’ the main writers whose books I read when I was younger. The ones I particularly remember now are Andre Norton (an American science fiction and fantasy writer), John Christopher (author of the classic Tripods books), Malcolm Saville, and Capt. W.E.Johns (author of the ‘Biggles’ books). Oh, and E.C.Tubb, and the entire Perry Rhodan series.
I gather that over the years you have amassed quite a collection of Sherlock Holmes related books. Could you tell us any more about this collection?
I started off back in the late 1970s, early 1980s collecting as many Sherlock Holmes adventures by authors other than Arthur Conan Doyle as I could. I’d seen some of them, and read them, in my local library, but the obsessive-compulsive part of me wanted them all on the shelves in my room (and the libraries tend to want their books back after a while – damn them!) So I’ve ended up now with several hundred Sherlock Holmes adventures, ranging from the excellent to the absolutely terrible, plus a whole load of reasonably rare literary criticism revolving around the character (long essays by people using ambiguous quotations from the Conan Doyle stories to “prove” that Watson was married four times, not three, or that Sherlock went to Cambridge not Oxford). And numerous dictionaries listing every character and object mentioned in Conan Doyle’s stories, which only come in useful if I want to know something like where Sherlock Holmes got the Persian slipper that he keeps his tobacco in (a question I was actually asked today, as it happens).
I know that Death Cloud hasn’t been released yet but can you give us any hints as to what we can expect from your next book in the series? In your author’s afterword you mention something about the “repulsive Red Leech”.
What I can say is that the book starts in England, but shifts to America after a while, and pits Sherlock against a villain who is possibly even more disturbing than Baron Maupertuis. And yes, the mysterious red leech makes an appearance. Arthur Conan Doyle refers to “the repulsive story of the red leech” as being a case that Sherlock was once involved with. Well, this is it.
Is there anything else you would like to say to the readers of this blog?
I think they’ve heard more than enough from me already!
The information from your publisher describes you as a “lifelong Sherlock Holmes fan” and that you have a “passion for the original novels of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle”. What is it about this character and these stories that so appeals to you?
When I was a kid I was tall and thin and a bit geeky, like Sherlock Holmes. I appreciated being able to read books in which the lead character relied on intelligence to get through, not on strength or agility, and who didn’t particularly want to make friends. As far as he was concerned, he had one good friend and that was enough. And he used to sleep a lot when he wasn’t on a case, which appealed to me. Now I’m much older, I’m huge and geeky, more like Mycroft Holmes. Sad, but true.
Do you have a favourite Conan Doyle Sherlock Holmes story?
I keep going back to ‘The Hound of the Baskervilles’, mainly for the atmosphere and for the fact that Watson spends quite a lot of his time investigating without Holmes around. And there’s that lovely image that Watson sees of a shadowy figure on top of one of the tors, gazing out into Dartmoor. I think it’s a wonderfully put together book.
How did you get the ‘job’ of writing these Young Sherlock books?
My agent – Robert Kirby, at United Agents – had been working with the Doyle family, and with their representative Jon Lellenberg in the USA, on the collected letters of Arthur Conan Doyle. During the course of discussions, Robert raised the idea of reviving Sherlock Holmes for a young adult audience. He is also, by the way, Anthony Horowitz’s agent, so he knows the ropes when it comes to the young adult market. Having got their blessing, he then came to me because he knew I loved the originals and that I’d always wanted to write a “real” Sherlock Holmes novel (we’ll ignore the ‘Doctor Who’ / ‘Sherlock Holmes’ crossover that I wrote some years back). I said yes straight away, and then spent the next few months writing a proposal setting out exactly what I wanted to do and three sample chapters. The family liked them, Robert liked them, and fortunately Jon Lelleberg liked them as well (and he was the man who could have torpedoed the whole thing, if he’d wanted to.
I hear there are approximately 387 Sherlock Holmes fan clubs worldwide, and I imagine a significant number of websites, blogs and Facebook groups dedicated to the character. Did you feel under a lot of pressure when writing Death Cloud?
Absolutely no pressure whatsoever, apart from the natural pressure any writer feels not to embarrass themselves. I had such a clear vision of what I wanted to do and to say, and of the essential fight for control of Sherlock’s soul that will form the core of the series, that I just had to let the words flow out as clearly as possible. And being a big Holmes buff myself, I knew I could put in enough obvious and subtle references that I could keep the fanbase happy. After all, I’ve done it with ‘Doctor Who’ successfully enough. I know how these things work. I know what I would want to read if I was the reader rather than the writer.
I imagine there are a large number of traditionalists out there who will be hostile towards the concept of a series of books about a teenage Sherlock Holmes. What do you have to say to these potential detractors who will take the idea very seriously?
Everyone is entitled to their opinion, of course, and I wouldn’t try to detract from anyone having their say. What I would point out is that if you accept that Sherlock Holmes as a “real” character then he must have had a childhood. Writing about that childhood is a valid thing to do, as long as it’s done consistently with what Conan Doyle wrote (e.g. no spurious appearances by Watson or Moriarty!) Having said all that, I did have my doubts about ‘Young Bond’ as a concept, but Charlie Higson pulled it off with style.
Will you be reading fan club sites and blogs to gauge reactions to Death Cloud?
I’ll be sneaking some looks, here and there. What I don’t want to do is get myself freaked by the criticism and just curl up into a ball. That wouldn’t be a good idea at all. But it’s always useful to see what people think works and doesn’t work.
There are obvious parallels to be drawn between Charlie Higson’s Young Bond series and your new series. Have you read any of the Young Bond books?
I have. I actually had to – I’d previously written ‘The Bond Files’ for Virgin Books – the complete guide to everything Bond in books, films, comics, computer games and everything else, so I’ve read virtually every James Bond product there is. I knew Charlie vaguely anyway, from when I wrote some tie-in material for ‘Randall and Hopkirk: Deceased’ some years back, and I was invited along to his launch party at the London Aquarium. He was invited to my launch party, but he was abroad in his palatial Italian villa. One day, I will have a palatial Italian villa. One day.
In one short paragraph how would you describe the 14 year-old Sherlock Holmes in Death Cloud?
He’s conflicted and he’s lonely. He doesn’t make friends easily – at least, he doesn’t think so – and he probably thinks too much.
Do you think your writing of this book was made easier or harder as a result of the fact that Conan Doyle gave very little away about his character’s early years?
I think it made it a lot easier. All we really know about Sherlock from Conan Doyle’s writings is (a) his family are descended from a line of local squires, (b) his mother’s side of the family are descended from the French Vernet family of artists, and (c) he has a brother named Mycroft. Everything else is pure speculation, which gave me tremendous freedom of manoeuvre. If Coann Doyle had written thousands of words about Sherlock’s early life then, frankly, there wouldn’t have been much point in me doing this series.
How did you go about researching this book?
The usual way – books, books and more books. I hunted on Amazon and EBay, in Waterstones and in remaindered bookshops, looking for stuff that would illuminate the era I was writing in (trains, canals, etc). I spent a while in Farnham library, going through their local history section. The Sherlock Holmes details I checked with ‘The Annotated Sherlock Holmes’, edited and annotated by William Baring-Gould, and also with Jack Tracey’s ‘Encyclopedia Sherlockiana’. And for details of the tunnel under the Thames at Rotherhythe I went back to a couple of books in my collection.
When Charlie Higson wrote his Young Bond books he had decided it would be a series of five, and also the point in Bond’s life that the series would go up to. Do you already have a plan of how many books there will be in your series? Up to what stage of Holmes’ life would you hope to cover?
In my mind, I’m thinking possibly nine books. Anything more than that might be pushing my luck, but you never know. I’ve got to get Sherlock through school years, and then (if allowed) through University. That would take him up to his early twenties, I suppose. So, maybe a book for every year of his life? I already know what the last line of the last book will be. It will be Sherlock, in the chemistry lab at St Bart’s Hospital, having only recently arrived in London, turning around and seeing a man standing in the doorway, and Sherlock says: “You have been in Afghanistan, I perceive.” The man is Doctor John Watson, of course, and this is the point where the Conan Doyle adventures start.
In order to become the man we know and love, Sherlock Holmes must have fallen under the influence of a number of ‘mentors’ in his formative years. You have created one of these mentors in the form of Amyus Crowe (I loved this character by the way). How did you go about creating this character?
If you look at Sherlock Holmes as a grown up (which I did a lot of), he’s obviously pulled in two different directions. On the one hand there’s the athletic, logical, detail-obsessed, deductive Sherlock, and on the other there’s the lazy, violin-playing, theatrical master of disguise. To me, this suggests that Sherlock as an impressionable kid fell under the spell of two mentors, each of whom tried to pull him in different directions, and that’s the underlying theme of the entire Young Sherlock Holmes series – a fight for control of Sherlock’s soul by two father-figures. Amyus Crowe is the first, and I based him partially on John Wayne in ‘True Grit’ but more on a character named Skua Spetember in Alan Dean Foster’s SF novel ‘Icerigger’ (which I thoroughly recommend to anyone). Amyus Crowe is a genial American from the deep South with a background in hunting and tracking, and he can teach Sherlock about the observation of small details. The second is named Rufus Stone, and he’s a violinist of gypsy descent who will turn up in the second book and will have a large part to play in the third. Amyus Crowe and Rufus Stone do not like each other, but they both treat Sherlock like a son.
This question contains spoliers - highlight with your cursor to read it: His Last Bow, chronologically the final Sherlock Holmes instalment by Conan Doyle, sees Holmes having retired to the countryside to keep bees. His interest in bees has never been explained until now. How did you decide on using bees as a plot feature in Death Cloud?
I wanted something that would link Sherlock at the beginning of his life with Sherlock at the end of his life. I like the idea of literary circles, where what goes around comes around, and people end up where they started. I knew that Sherlock Holmes eventually retires to keep bees, and you’re right – Doyle never explains why it should be bees, and not greyhounds or rabbits. So I decided that Sherlock should have a formative experience with bees at an early age in order to pique his interest. After that, the whole thing just wrote itself…
As I read Death Cloud I could see the germination of some of the character traits that we know in the adult Sherlock Holmes. Have you already decided which traits you are going to develop in each book of the series?
I know that Sherlock has to learn martial arts at some stage, which will probably mean going to Japan (one member of the Doyle family works extensively in Japan, and is very much in favour of this idea). He will have to learn the violin, which starts in Book 2 on a sea voyage to New York. He will have to take boxing and sword-fighting lessons, although I’ve already set up the fact that he knows he has to do that. And he’ll have to get involved with a theatrical troupe in order to perfect his later ability to disguise himself. Apart from that he’ll have to start stocking his brain with lots of detail about tattoos and tobaccos, and generally learn how to think rationally.
This question contains spoliers - highlight with your cursor to read it: Baron Maupertuis is one of the most fantastic and physically gruesome villains I have come across in YA literature – in which nightmare was the idea for this character born?
It’s hard to remember now, but I do know that the Baron was virtually the first thing that I developed for the story, before the plot and anything else. I just loved that vision of a man who was in one way controlled by shadowy people behind the scenes but in another way was controlling them. The original title for the book was ‘Shadow of the Marionette’ (before being changed to ‘The Colossal Schemes of Baron Maupertuis’ and then ‘Death Cloud’) Where the actual image came from I’m not sure. Somewhere in the depths of my mind I think it links back to the time that Justin Richards (‘The Invisible Detective’ and various ‘Doctor Who’ novels) and I were at university, and he was explaining the concept of the uber-marionette in theatre – the performer who would be completely subjugated to the will of the director. I think that’s where it came from. Justin had this theory that the script for the Walt Disney sci-fi movie ‘The Black Hole’ was a hidden exploration of the theory of the uber-marionette (the names of the main antagonist and of the main robot are, apparently dead give-aways).
Victoriana has become increasingly popular over the last few years with the rise in popularity of the steampunk genre. Have you read any books from this genre?
I’ve loved Steampunk ever since it started, which I would argue was with the triumvirate of Tim Powers (‘The Anubis Gates’), K.W.Jeter (‘Infernal Devices’ and ‘Morlock Nights’) and James Blaylock (‘Homunculus’). I think the genre has pretty much run out of steam (ha-hah!) now, but for a while it was probably the most interesting thing going.
Which actor portrays your favourite screen incarnation of Sherlock Holmes?
I flicker between Robert Stephens in ‘The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes’, for his vulnerability and his acerbic wit, and Christopher Plummer in ‘Murder by Decree’, for his humanity.
Have you seen the Robert Downey Jr Sherlock Holmes movie? If so, what did you think of it?
I loved the film. The script took little background elements from Conan Doyle (like the scene where Holmes describes the owner of a watch) and built them into something marvellous, and the film itself reverses the usual trick of having Holmes as the straight man and Watson as the bumbling comedy relief, and instead has Holmes as the comedy relief and Watson as the straight man. Very, very clever.
There have been many Sherlock Holmes novels written by a variety of authors since Conan Doyle died. Do you have any particular favourites?
Richard L. Boyer’s book ‘The Giant Rat of Sumatra’ has always been on my top ten list, as has Robert Lee Hall’s ‘Exit Sherlock Holmes’. Michael Hardwick’s ‘The Revenge of the Hound’ is an excellent novel. Michael Dibdin’s ‘The Last Sherlock Holmes Story’ is equally excellent, but very depressing. I also like Michael Kurland’s books about Sherlock’s arch-enemy Moriarty, in which Moriarty is a criminal but not as all-powerful as Sherlock thinks, and Sherlock seems to have become obsessed with trying to prove that Moriarty is responsible for every crime in London. The first of the books is ‘The Infernal Device’, and it’s well worth seeking out.
Have you ever considered writing an adult Sherlock Holmes novel or are you happy sticking to the YA market?
I’ve always had plans to write an adult Sherlock Holmes novel, but now that I’m writing Young Sherlock Holmes I’d like to write a book about a grown-up Sherlock living in London with John Watson, but bringing in characters and events from the YA series. Perhaps the return of Baron Maupertuis – who knows?
A number of books by the likes of Charlie Higson and Anthony Horowitz have been adapted into graphic novel format, as have a number of Holmes stories. Have you read any of Edginton and Culbard’s Sherlock Holmes graphic novels, and how would you feel if Death Cloud was given a similar treatment?
Graphic novel adaptations of books are a bit of an odd cross-breed, I’ve always thought. The way one structures the plot is different, and while books give you insights into what the characters are thinking graphic novels are entirely focussed on what things look like and the expressions on people’s faces. I’d far rather write an original story to be done as a graphic novel (if any publishers are reading this – please remember what I’ve said!) And my choice of artist would be Mike Collins, who I’ve shared convention bar space with on several occasions.
Apart from Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, who are your greatest literary influences?
The writers I keep going back to are Tim Powers (the virtual inventor of Steampunk), Jonathan Carroll (the master of the gripping first line and the amazing twist), Stephen Gallagher (a supreme master of construction and of building character) and David Morrell (for the way he builds tension and has his protagonists spending as much time fighting the landscape as fighting the enemy). Strangely, I’ve just been rereading a lot of Larry Niven’s SF, and I’m quite surprised how much what I’m doing now is similar to what he was doing back in the 1970s and early 1980s. I must have read him originally at an impressionable age.
What books/authors did you read when you were younger?
Lots of stuff. Tons of stuff. I’ve actually acknowledged in the front of ‘Death Cloud’ the main writers whose books I read when I was younger. The ones I particularly remember now are Andre Norton (an American science fiction and fantasy writer), John Christopher (author of the classic Tripods books), Malcolm Saville, and Capt. W.E.Johns (author of the ‘Biggles’ books). Oh, and E.C.Tubb, and the entire Perry Rhodan series.
I gather that over the years you have amassed quite a collection of Sherlock Holmes related books. Could you tell us any more about this collection?
I started off back in the late 1970s, early 1980s collecting as many Sherlock Holmes adventures by authors other than Arthur Conan Doyle as I could. I’d seen some of them, and read them, in my local library, but the obsessive-compulsive part of me wanted them all on the shelves in my room (and the libraries tend to want their books back after a while – damn them!) So I’ve ended up now with several hundred Sherlock Holmes adventures, ranging from the excellent to the absolutely terrible, plus a whole load of reasonably rare literary criticism revolving around the character (long essays by people using ambiguous quotations from the Conan Doyle stories to “prove” that Watson was married four times, not three, or that Sherlock went to Cambridge not Oxford). And numerous dictionaries listing every character and object mentioned in Conan Doyle’s stories, which only come in useful if I want to know something like where Sherlock Holmes got the Persian slipper that he keeps his tobacco in (a question I was actually asked today, as it happens).
I know that Death Cloud hasn’t been released yet but can you give us any hints as to what we can expect from your next book in the series? In your author’s afterword you mention something about the “repulsive Red Leech”.
What I can say is that the book starts in England, but shifts to America after a while, and pits Sherlock against a villain who is possibly even more disturbing than Baron Maupertuis. And yes, the mysterious red leech makes an appearance. Arthur Conan Doyle refers to “the repulsive story of the red leech” as being a case that Sherlock was once involved with. Well, this is it.
Is there anything else you would like to say to the readers of this blog?
I think they’ve heard more than enough from me already!
~~~
I know that Andrew has been amazingly busy on the run up to the publication of Death Cloud, including many radio interviews for stations up and down the country and so I am incredibly grateful for the time he has obviously spent answering my questions. Death Cloud is officially released on 4th June, but I have already seen it on the shelf in my local Waterstones. I loved Death Cloud and I am already looking forward to the next episode in the life of Young Sherlock Holmes.
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