This book is aptly named, as a similarity that emerged from Holmes ' part in the story was his likeness to the devil himself. Holmes would approach his victims with kindliness, and reel them in with his charismatic personality. Then he would kill them. Several women he met, dated, and eventually married, only to kill. Such is the devil, seeking whom he may devour, drawing men in only to kill them.
I read The Lion, Witch and The Wardrobe. The author is Geoffrey Bles. I chose the book because my teacher assigned it to the class. The book is a make belief fantasy book.
Sherlock Holmes Argumentative Essay While Sherlock Holmes habitually portrayed a considerate, helpful man, it was certain he felt not a twinge of guilt concerning the death of Dr. Grimesby Roylott. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s story entitled “The Adventure of the Speckled Band” features the famous detective with a shocking turn of events during the resolution, when it was revealed Sherlock Holmes was responsible for a poisonous snake bringing the end of Dr. Roylott’s hostile life. This event did not catalyze shame inside of him, though, as each man felt harsh despising towards one another. Furthermore, Sherlock Holmes could not have known the snake would kill Dr. Roylott. Lastly, it was the irrational decision of Dr. Roylott that caused his death, arguably more than Sherlock Holmes’ cane did.
The CBS show Elementary, written by Robert Doherty, alters several characteristics of the primary characters present in the Sherlock Holmes book series in order to create a unique storyline. As Watson and Holmes interact with each throughout the pilot of Elementary, Watson, ironically, deducts that the reason Sherlock initially turned to drugs and avoids meaningful connections. At the end of the pilot Holmes concludes why Watson shows interest in his past life. Her conclusion indirectly characterizes Sherlock as scared due to his past experience of losing a loved one, which fuels his actions to distance himself, adopt a withdrawn attitude, and resort to drug abuse. Elementary’s contradicts Doyle’s Sherlock who used drugs to enhance his abilities
Sherlock Holmes returns again in Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s, The Hound of the Baskervilles. Trying to solve the mysterious case of Sir Charles death and the tale of the vicious hound, he is accompanied by Dr. Watson, Dr. Mortimer, and Sir Henry. Each character goes through a straining, hostile series of events in Dartmoor and Baskerville Hall, before revealing the truth of the dark hound. Throughout this bewildering adventure, the theme of greed is a powerful motivator is developed via the self-centered, craving mind of Stapleton and the intricate relationships formed between characters.
Set in 12th century Scotland, it is the narrative of a knight who finds himself with a very difficult job of subduing the Scottish Highland clans determined not to be ruled by the Normans. His job gets even more complicated when a highland woman takes his heart
In the novel of The Hound of the Baskervilles there are many key characters to put us on the right track and to confuse us. When Dr. Mortimer comes in
Throughout the book, many things are eventually proven different than what was previously thought. The theme for this book is things are not always as they seem. For example, at first people believed that Sir Charles died of heart failure, while still true, something led him to his heart failing which was the scare of the hound. Also, at first many people assumed that the hound was a supernatural creature killing the Baskervilles. After more investigation that assumption was
The main characters Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson are hired by Dr. James Mortimer to investigate the curse which is believed to be the cause of Sir Charles’ heart attack, resulting in his death and in addition, to protect Sir Charles’ only heir, Sir Henry Baskervilles. Mortimer, Henry, Holmes and Watson take a journey to Dartmoor, Western England to figure out the truth. They end up finding many surprising matters of fact related to the case, which include intricate stories of hidden relations and mysterious acts with hidden motives. Eventually Holmes and Watson piece together each bit of evidence and discover Stapleton was the mastermind behind the hound and the murders, all because he wanted a share of the family fortune he alienated - the
Charged with keeping their society safe, they work to fight the dark forces of evil and particularly the Lodge of the Lynx from spreading its influence in Britain. Their leader is the wealthy, handsome, and educated Scotsman Adam Sinclair who is living a privileged life as a Master of the Hunt and Baronet. An important character in the novel is Peregrine Lovat a esoteric crime fighter who uses sketches to dig up the past in helping the psychologist Sinclair and his police partner Macleod fight evil. Romance is a subplot in the novel as Sinclair meets up with a beautiful and smart American doctor. With a lot of mediaeval history of the Templars, East Indian mysticism, pre-Christian gods such as Odin and Thor, Free Masonry and Hitler, these are some fantastic mysteries in a contemporary setup.
The Hound of the Baskervilles, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, investigates the Baskerville family curse alongside Dr. Watson and Sherlock Holmes. They work together, sometimes unknowingly to solve the tale before something unspeakable occurs. Throughout the suspenseful adventure, the author explores the theme of greed being a powerful motivator by causing the reader to believe that the Barrymore’s want to kill Sir Henry to get the riches while it is someone else instead. The dilemma is the author makes the reader consider that Mr. and Mrs. Barrymore want to execute Sir Henry.
The story begins with Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson; in their office in London. They examine a cane left in the office by an unidentified visitor. The arrival of Mortimer who presents them with a document, dated 1742, that reveals the legend of the Baskerville curse. Hugo Baskerville was fixated with a local girl, whom he kidnaps. The girl escaped and Hugo makes a deal with the devil and sends out his hounds to search.
A crime that reaches Sherlock Holmes is not just a broken law, but a mystery. Trivia locates patterns to form functional solutions, while Doyle creates a world of disguises, drugs, and intrigue, in which the answer is never the obvious or expected. The facts presented are not the definite, or even likely, conclusion. This is apparent in the story’s mystery, in which the wife of Neville St. Clair witnessed what appeared to be her husband’s murder, leading to the arrest of a beggar, Hugh Boone, who was found at the scene of the crime. However, Sherlock Holmes deduces that Boone and St. Clair are the same man, revealing that St. Clair had been commuting to the city to beg rather than work and had allowed his own arrest to protect his ruse.
The authors of the Golden Age shows their faith and belief in the detectives (emphatically vulnerable detectives). The detectives in these stories dominate the plot and solve the mystery case by influencing the perspective of the reader. The detectives mostly are self-conscious and Golden Age does not expect the reader to solve the crime ahead of the detective. They are decidedly unaggressive, non-god like, nondominant and do not exude ‘macho-like’ qualities of a ‘real he-man’. In the Detective Fiction, detectives fall into three broad categories; amateurs, private investigators, and the professional police.
H. Auden, in an essay The Guilty Vicarage, describes how the detective novels depict not just one guilty criminal, but, by putting the of suspicion on each and every member of the closed society, marks each and every member as such. The detective, by identifying the criminal and purging them from the society absolves the guilt of the entire society. According to Auden, the detective absolves not just the suspects of their guilt, but provides the same absolution/salvation to the readers of detective fiction also. Auden thus, points out some of the more unwitting functions of detective fiction, that is, to work as a literary embodiment of a mechanism which assumes everybody to be guilty and thereby the need of subjecting all to confession. In The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, once the confessions from all major characters is extracted, the most significant of all confessions still remains -- that of the murderer.