Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, appreciated for his masterful works to the point of him ending up a triumphant man in the world of writing, with works like “The Mystery of Sasassa Valley” and “The American Tale”. Being known for defeating many complications forthcoming his way, as while he had been pursuing his medical career, he was filled with the obstacle of, becoming a recognizable and prominent writer simultaneously, if he had been born in the 21st century, the idea of trying to manage a medical career and be a victorious and marveled writer is still a feat difficult to withstand. It is written with full honesty that no man could have orchestrated his writing in a better tone, or a better mood, no man who put a pencil on paper to write, will ever …show more content…
At the university he was attending, he wasn’t the only author who would be respected in great certification, as other authors like Robert Louis Stevenson attended too. Following a few years into his becoming of a doctor, he wrote a short story, which is “The Mystery Of Sasassa Valley”, with heavy dose of influence from the compositions we recognize written by Bret Harte, and undoubtedly Edgar Allen Poe in addition. Later that exact year, his story “The American Tale”, had been recognized by many because of it being published by the London Society, leading him to find out that “shillings might be earned in other ways then filling phials”, leading us to the point of him becoming a recognizable author. In 1888, Beeton’s Christmas Annual” published “A Study In Scarlet” which had propelled him to stardom. He wanted to explore all elements of writing, as he wrote “The Mystery Of Cloomber”, about three Buddhist monks and the afterlife, which had brought in a paranormal perspective, and he did believe in fairies... even after childhood. Sherlock Holmes, one of Arthur’s most notorious characters, came to an unwanted end in “The Final Problem”, which had made his fans so disappointed, that