Of the four stories, I liked "The Mysterious Woman" best because it felt most like a story from the canon, with Holmes uncovering the reason behind a woman's sudden and inexplicable behavioral changes.
The places and many of the people in this book are historically accurate, which was nifty. The book contains lots of photos of locations from around the time the stories take place. However, the writing sometimes dragged because the author often hared off on tangents about how various bits of mining machinery and apparatus operated. Where one paragraph would have sufficed, we got a page or two, and so on. Great if you're fascinated by 1890s mining methods in Montana, I suppose, but I eventually began to skim them.
Also, the author repeatedly portrays Holmes as using cocaine to keep alert while on a stakeout, and I am pretty sure (though I admit it has been a few years since I read the whole canon) that he canonically only uses cocaine when he is between cases and suffering from extreme ennui, never while on a case. That bugged me.
So... it was a fun read, but not one I'll be rereading.
If This was a Movie, I Would Rate It: PG-13 for some mentions of husbandly "urges," some alcohol and drug use, and some violence.
This is my 33rd book read off my TBR shelves for #TheUnreadShelfProject2023.
Oh, where in Montana did you go? Was it your first visit there?
ReplyDeleteWe stayed in Gardiner and went down into Yellowstone. Most of our time in Montana was just driving to Gardiner and then in Yellowstone, but it was definitely beautiful countryside!
DeleteI've been through Montana a couple times before, but as a kid. First time there as an adult :-)