Helpful Score: 2
From Publishers Weekly: "Writing a Sherlock Holmes tale is, for popular writers, equivalent to playing Hamlet for male actors: a challenge that few refuse and many regret. Bestselling author Carr acquits himself with honor, though not high honors, in this short novel that pits Holmes, Watson and Mycroft Holmes against conspirators at Queen Victoria's Royal Palace of Holyrood in Edinburgh, Scotland. When the men are killed at Holyrood in a fashion similar to the slaying centuries before of David Rizzio, an Italian confidant of Mary, Queen of Scots, Mycroft, who is Victoria's head of intelligence, calls upon his brother and Watson to help solve the mystery. Are the killings the work of Scottish nationalists? Or perhaps the sign of a restless ghost? From the latter question, and the novel's primary setting of the dank castle, emanates a well-drawn atmosphere of gloom that makes this story a nice companion to The Hound of the Baskervilles..."Copyright © Reed Business Information
Helpful Score: 2
Well done!
Helpful Score: 2
I just finished this book and enjoyed it! I think the Sherlock Holmes derivitives like this one are fun to read. Laurie King's books are as good or maybe better than this one (same genre.)
Helpful Score: 2
Caleb Carr writes well (The Alienist, etc.) and he does the Holmes canon a nice service in "The Italian Secretary". Set in the castle where Mary, Queen of Scots, and her ladies witnessed the murder of David Rizzio. Holmes and Watson are summoned by Mycroft Holmes to solve a brace of murders. Queen Victoria is in residence, and adding to the complications a clandestine tour of the Rizzio murder site and a mysterious bloodstain that never dries.
Helpful Score: 1
THE FURTHER ADVENTURES OF SHERLOCK HOLMES...
Caleb Carr reaches back into the world of opium dens and Jack the Ripper to bring a new tale of the most intriguing of all detectives, Sherlock Holmes...very interesting and lots of historical quality.
Caleb Carr reaches back into the world of opium dens and Jack the Ripper to bring a new tale of the most intriguing of all detectives, Sherlock Holmes...very interesting and lots of historical quality.
Helpful Score: 1
A Sherlock Holmes mystery written after the death of Doyle. Very true to form and a good mystery until the end. If I hadn't know better, I would have thought I was reading one of my old favorites.
I love Sherlock Holmes books (by Doyle) and supernatural elements in any book. So I thought this would be to my liking. But I never finished it and am now cured of reading Sherlock Holmes pastiches. This was so boring, at least up to the point I read (on their way to Scotland.)
A must read for Sherlock Holmes fans!!!
This adds a new adventure for Sherlock Holmes. This audio is well done with a great variety of voices utilized. The plot is involved but the historical detail accurate and adds dimension to the story. These audio cassettes listened to only once.
A Sherlock Holmes story, by Caleb Carr, not Arthur Conan Doyle. Carr does the atmosphere of the times very well.
Good Sherlocke Holmes story. Not as good as Carr's Alienist and Angel of Darkness but still a good read!
It's been a while since I have read any of Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories--I know I read quite a few of them back in the the 70's. I thought Carr did a pretty decent job of portraying Holmes in the vein of Doyle and overall I did like this take on the great detective.
The story starts out when Holmes is cryptically summoned by his brother Mycroft to Scotland to look into the deaths of two men who were working on the restoration of Holyroodhouse, the ancient palace of Mary, Queen of Scots, and the official residence of the British monarch in Scotland.
Mycroft feels that the killings may be linked to a possible assassination attempt on Queen Victoria by Scottish nationalists. But when Holmes and Watson get to Holyrood, another reason for the murders is soon disclosed which is tied to the murder of David Rizzio, the titular Italian Private Secretary of Mary who was murdered by her jealous husband Darnley in the 16th century. Was Rizzio's spirit haunting Holyrood or did other factors play into the deaths?
Overall, not a bad Holmes pastiche which I would mildly recommend.
The story starts out when Holmes is cryptically summoned by his brother Mycroft to Scotland to look into the deaths of two men who were working on the restoration of Holyroodhouse, the ancient palace of Mary, Queen of Scots, and the official residence of the British monarch in Scotland.
Mycroft feels that the killings may be linked to a possible assassination attempt on Queen Victoria by Scottish nationalists. But when Holmes and Watson get to Holyrood, another reason for the murders is soon disclosed which is tied to the murder of David Rizzio, the titular Italian Private Secretary of Mary who was murdered by her jealous husband Darnley in the 16th century. Was Rizzio's spirit haunting Holyrood or did other factors play into the deaths?
Overall, not a bad Holmes pastiche which I would mildly recommend.
...The slaying of David Rizzio, music master and friend to Mary, Queen of Scots, was an extraordinarily brutal and treacherous act---even for a time when brutality and treachery were the order of the day. Now, the ghosts of Holyroodhouse are being reawakened by someone with a diabolical agenda of greed, madness, and terror as Holmes and Watson set out to trap a killer who is eager to rewrite history in blood.
I haven't read this book (too many books to read!) so I can't give my opinion about it. But I do know that Caleb Carr is the author of the international bestseller"The Alienist". The book features Sherlock Holmes and Watson who are requested by Queen Victoria to investigate the mysterious and gruesome deaths of two young men.