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The Man With The Twisted Lip
The Man With The Twisted Lip | Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, P. James Macaluso
23 posts | 23 read | 1 reading | 5 to read
Sherlock Holmes, the world's 'only unofficial consulting detective', was first introduced to readers in A Study in Scarlet published by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle in 1887. It was with the publication of The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, however, that the master sleuth grew tremendously in popularity, later to become one of the most beloved literary characters of all time. In this book series, the short stories comprising The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes have been amusingly illustrated using only Lego brand minifigures and bricks. The illustrations recreate, through custom designed Lego models, the composition of the black and white drawings by Sidney Paget that accompanied the original publication of these adventures appearing in The Strand Magazine from July 1891 to June 1892. Paget's iconic illustrations are largely responsible for the popular image of Sherlock Holmes, including his deerstalker cap and Inverness cape, details never mentioned in the writings of Conan Doyle. This uniquely illustrated collection, which features some of the most famous and enjoyable cases investigated by Sherlock Holmes and his devoted friend and biographer Dr. John H. Watson, including A Sandal in Bohemia and The Red-Headed League, is sure to delight Lego enthusiasts, as well as fans of the Great Detective, both old and new. The Man with the Twisted Lip: Dr. Watson accompanies Sherlock Holmes to Kent, to investigate the strange disappearance of Neville St. Clair, a respectable country businessman. A disfigured beggar is arrested for the murder of the missing man as some clothes of Neville St. Clair were recovered from his room above an opium den. Holmes surmises, however, that the truth is less sinister and simply an exceptional case of mistaken identity.
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dabbe
The Man with the Twisted Lip | Arthur Conan Doyle
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IndoorDame I‘m of 2 minds about this one. At first I was delighted by the surprise reveal! But in the end I genuinely wasn‘t convinced that someone could support a wife and kids in an upper/middle class-ish lifestyle by begging 1mo
Librarybelle I found this one to be weak - in the prior cases, there has been murder and revenge and other elements akin to a mystery. This one just seemed so lackluster. As I read, I kept thinking something big had to happen, and well, it didn‘t for me. Though, I‘ve been reading thrillers and other mysteries lately that have my pulse on edge, so this could be a fairly poor assessment. 1mo
Cuilin Started off slow, the mystery was interesting. And as @IndoorDame said I also wasn‘t convinced that begging could support an upper middle-class life style. 1mo
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dabbe Other than perhaps Doyle giving us his “just say no“ to drugs policy, I didn't see why we had to be inside the opium den--unless it was again to see how excellent Holmes is at disguising himself. Agree with all of you above re: just how much one could make on begging. 1mo
CogsOfEncouragement I figured this one out, I think mostly because Holmes himself is always using disguises. The hidden clothes clued me in. 1mo
CrystalE02 I did like the story, not my favorites from the others. I get a kick out of Holmes and his disguises. 1mo
kelli7990 I liked this one. 1mo
Aimeesue I like this one. Stephen King also used the businessman to beggar idea in a section Hearts in Atlantis, which I reread tonight. Depending on where you‘re asking for handouts, and your skill, you can make quite a bit, according to those who‘ve done it. My area has a lot of panhandlers who work the main streets - some of them have been doing it for years in the same locations. 1mo
38 likes8 comments
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dabbe
The Man with the Twisted Lip | Arthur Conan Doyle
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IndoorDame I thought it revealed surprisingly similar attitudes to things you hear today about charity, welfare, and panhandling 1mo
Librarybelle Agreed, @IndoorDame . It made me think of stories you hear regarding welfare and panhandling in today‘s news. I could see this happening today, and it may actually happen. 1mo
IndoorDame @Librarybelle I can see the part where someone tries to hide it from their children happening. I cannot see the part where somebody does this as a ruse happening 1mo
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dabbe This society deeply disapproved of begging; otherwise, why would St. Clair feel complete and utter SHAME for his actions, so much so, that he tries everything to conceal and fake his own disappearance? 1mo
CogsOfEncouragement Red hair comes up again. This time, part of what makes him as pitiable as possible. I have always loved red hair, adored the lovely strands of some women I know, and had a crush on two different boys with red hair in high school. So I never understand when redheads get made fun of. But I know in movies and real life they get told (fill in mean statement) because they are “a ginger“. 1mo
CogsOfEncouragement Making money at something that does not require an education or “worthy“ skill has me thinking about some other jobs that people do only because the money is so good, not because it is what they really want to do. Bartending for one, I've known at least one person with a degree do that because they can more easily pay off their school debt with the money they make doing that than the entry level job in their field. 1mo
CrystalE02 It sort of reminds me of what is going on today with what is heard on the news and everything else. What is the deal with the red hair theme? I am guessing that people with red hair back then were bad. Lol!!! I have family members with red hair and they are good. 1mo
dabbe @CrystalE02 Maybe Doyle sees them as fiery and spirited! 🤩 1mo
Librarybelle @IndoorDame I could see both. I‘m also thinking of modern day GoFundMe scams, which is different and kind of stretches what happens in the story, but if this can happen… I think my reading books featuring horrible people also makes me extremely suspicious. 😂 1mo
Aimeesue @dabbe Red hair makes him very identifiable as the beggar and draws attention while he‘s begging. It‘s also light years away from his natural appearance. People remember the remarkable characteristics and don‘t look any deeper. (edited) 1mo
dabbe @Aimeesue Excellent point. 1mo
30 likes11 comments
blurb
dabbe
The Man with the Twisted Lip | Arthur Conan Doyle
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Librarybelle Perhaps the twist itself, identifying the man…we knew a few things going into the conclusion - the disappearance, the individual picked up - but it‘s almost coincidental that the two are the same person. I did read this late last night, and as I mentioned before did not find it very strong, so I may have missed a key section! 1mo
IndoorDame I thought not! I think his cryptic line about the key being in the bathroom is supposed to be the “fair play” element, but I can‘t imagine anyone figuring it out from that 🧐🤷🏻‍♀️ 1mo
CatLass007 There was no “fair play” element in this story. Everything relies on coincidence. 1mo
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dabbe I think compared to the others we've read that this is the one that gives us the most clues, and we don't see Holmes showing off some pie-in-the-sky talent (à la Nancy Drew, too) where his extreme knowledge of tobaccos, for example, is what leads him to solve the case. I agree with you, @IndoorDame, that the key line was a bit obscure and might be why we are like Watson in that we never can solve the case like Holmes can. 1mo
CogsOfEncouragement Well, I figured it out by there being one man but two sets of clothes, one set being hidden. But maybe knowing of how Holmes uses disguises is “extra“ knowledge? Maybe not though, assuming you read these stories in order, we all have that info. 1mo
CrystalE02 I don't think so. I think it was twist. Just the simple fact that Holmes always has something up his sleeve. 1mo
Aimeesue The clues were there. Hidden set of clothes was telling. Why would he have taken his clothing off or been stripped if they‘d killed him? There wasn‘t time anyway. 1mo
33 likes7 comments
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dabbe
The Man with the Twisted Lip | Arthur Conan Doyle
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IndoorDame In typical Sherlock fashion that quote is sneaky and uber specific, focusing on women‘s observations and analytical reasoner‘s (read men or Sherlock) conclusions 1mo
Librarybelle I don‘t think we can necessarily look at this as positive. It‘s Holmes, and he feels he is superior. 1mo
dabbe One can read this quote in a couple of ways. On the one hand Sherlock could be seen as saying that women are not analytical reasoners--quite the negative view. On the other hand, when he says this, Holmes also complements Mrs. St. Clair on her evidence that her husband really wrote that letter, so he could be positively acknowledging that a women's impression may be more valuable than reasoning. As always, Holmes's character is hard-to-read. 1mo
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dabbe Also, for the second time, we have a woman who has no clear idea what her husband does for a living, or even where he works (A Case of Identity). This fact to me doesn't bode well for a positive view of women in Victorian society, especially as, in both cases, the lack of information was because the husband was hiding something. At least Mary knows where John/James (she calls him James in this one--???) is--even in the middle of the night! 😂 1mo
CogsOfEncouragement I see this statement as giving higher value to “women's intuition“ than his own deductions in certain circumstances. Big moment of some kind of humility for Holmes in my opinion. I don't see Holmes as a misogynist. He equally considers himself superior to men and women alike. He does not hate women, or ill use them. Everyone is simply lacking when compared to himself. 1mo
CrystalE02 It is Holmes!!! He can be a pain. Why did Watson's wife call him James though? 1mo
Aimeesue @CogsOfEncouragement Yes, that. Well put. 1mo
mom2bugnbee I wondered about Mary calling Watson James as well. John isn't a nickname for James, is it? Or was it then? I don't think so... 1mo
26 likes9 comments
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dabbe
The Man with the Twisted Lip | Arthur Conan Doyle
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Librarybelle I‘ll just say again I found it weaker than others that we read. 🤷🏻‍♀️ 1mo
IndoorDame St. Clair claims he wasn‘t hiding from his wife just his kids (I‘m skeptical) I wonder if she ever finds out 1mo
CatLass007 It was an odd story, one that I didn‘t particularly enjoy. 1mo
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dabbe I still want to know:
-what was in the special package Mrs. St. Clair had to get?
-did St. Clair confess the secrets of his lifestyle to his wife?
-Does he keep his solemn oaths, and never take up begging again?
-If so, then how did he maintain his £700+ per year lifestyle?
-He could have gone back to being a reporter, but certainly he couldn't have maintained the estate and a family on £2 per week.
-Maybe he takes a career on the stage. 🤩
1mo
CogsOfEncouragement I just finished a rom-com five book series. The last book gave not only one, but TWO satisfying epilogues. I LOVE a good epilogue, especially for a character driven series. But this short story is not that. This a short mystery/puzzle. The point is to figure out the answer, or to be amused/entertained when the answer is revealed. Knowing what everyone is doing a year from now is not the point. I'm fine with the format of these adventures. 1mo
CrystalE02 I found this story to be less enjoyable than the others. I am just wondering if St. Clair wife ever found out about him. 1mo
kelli7990 I was okay with how this story ended. 1mo
Read4life I‘m ok with how it ended given the style of Doyle‘s writing in these stories. As @CogsOfEncouragement said, be amazed by Holmes and on to the next. 🤓 1mo
dabbe @Read4life @CogsOfEncouragment ... are you sure you want to just bow to Holmes and move on? We could be like the exclusive club The Baker Street Irregulars where they play the “Sherlockian Game“--where they see Holmes and Watson as REAL people and they analyze the heck out of every single item in every story. For example, essays abound regarding just the one time that Mary calls John “James“ in this story. 🤔 Agree 💯; let's move on! 🤩😂🤗 1mo
Read4life @dabbe 🤓 1mo
Aimeesue Wait, don‘t you all just spin those ending out yourselves? Just me? St. Clair obviously goes back to his lucrative begging career in a different disguise with the full support of his wife, who does not want to sell their home and descend into virtual poverty on Qa a week! ? 1mo
dabbe @Aimeesue Okay, you now need to publish your dioramas for #thebros and then write some SH pastiches. 🤩😂🤗 1mo
mom2bugnbee Am I the only one who thinks that all of the short stories end rather abruptly? Maybe they had to, because of something having to do with publication? Were these short stories serials like some of his longer tales? 1mo
25 likes13 comments
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kelli7990
The Man with the Twisted Lip | Arthur Conan Doyle
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For my #weeklyfavorites, I‘m choosing the tagged short story that I just finished reading this week for the #noplacelikeholmes readalong. I liked this story and it‘s short. I also read a Netgalley ARC this week about Stoicism and it was interesting but it wasn‘t my favorite so I didn‘t choose that one.

Read4life Fantastic! I‘m looking forward to our #NoPlaceLikeHolmes discussion. Thank you for sharing your #WeeklyFavorites 💙🦋💙 1mo
13 likes1 comment
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Read4life
The Man with the Twisted Lip | Arthur Conan Doyle
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Pickpick
TheAromaofBooks Yay!!! 1mo
TheSpineView Fantastic! 1mo
dabbe Can't wait! 🤩😘🤗 1mo
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CBee @dabbe @Read4life I just started watching Sherlock and can we please discuss how delicious Benedict Cumberbatch is? I mean I already knew that but gracious he‘s lovely 😍😍😍 1mo
DieAReader 🥳Great! 1mo
dabbe @CBee Deliciously yummy! Love me some Benedict! 🤩😂😘 1mo
Read4life @CBee Oh yes! 😍😍 Lovely indeed!! 1mo
49 likes7 comments
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dabbe
The Man with the Twisted Lip | Arthur Conan Doyle
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#NoPlaceLikeHolmes
@Cuilin #LitsyEvents

Hey, Sherlockians! Discussion TOMORROW over “The Man with the Twisted Lip.“ Below is a study guide with summary (spoiler alert!)

Here's the link: https://bit.ly/3xb9m5l

TGIF! 💚💙💚

SpellboundReader Thank you for the reminder. 👍🤗 1mo
dabbe @BeeCurious 💚🩷💚 1mo
kelli7990 Yay! I‘ll be able to participate in the discussion this time because I don‘t have any plans this weekend. 1mo
dabbe @kelli7990 Woohoo! 💚🩷💚 1mo
44 likes4 comments
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dabbe
The Man with the Twisted Lip | Arthur Conan Doyle
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#FirstLineFridays
@ShyBookOwl

“Isa Whitney, brother of the late Elias Whitney, D. D., Principal of the Theological College of St. George‘s, was much addicted to opium.“

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dabbe
The Man with the Twisted Lip | Arthur Conan Doyle
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#NoPlaceLikeHolmes
@Cuilin #LitsyEvents

Fabulous discussion today, Sherlockians! Next up: “The Man with the Twisted Lip.“ Below is a study guide with summary (spoiler alert!) Discussion two weeks from today (4/6) because this coming week is Easter weekend.

Here's the link: https://bit.ly/3xb9m5l

Have a lovely week! 💚💙💚

Librarybelle Thanks! 1mo
CatLass007 Thank you. It‘s on my calendar. 1mo
CatLass007 Right back atcha!😘 1mo
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Malisa
The Man with the Twisted Lip | Arthur Conan Doyle
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Pickpick

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
This one was equal parts intriguing and hilarious! So good!! #sherlock #sherlockholmes #arthurconandoyle #doyle #finished #completed

38 likes1 stack add
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squirrelbrain
The Man with the Twisted Lip | Arthur Conan Doyle
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I love the covers of these Penguin 60s - they‘re all fab even when they‘re quite horrible... 😲

#twistandshout

#beatlemaynia

Eggs 💗🎶📚👏🏻💗 5y
Jee_HookedOnBookz Hahaha I know what you mean! ❤️ 5y
83 likes2 comments
quote
Anneblythe
The Man with the Twisted Lip | Arthur Conan Doyle

"I confess that I have been as blind as a mole, but it is better to learn wisdom late than never to learn it at all."

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somebooksaround
The Man with the Twisted Lip | Arthur Conan Doyle
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A couple tiny books with big stories. I‘ve had these for ages. Of course Arthur Conan Doyle‘s will always be a staple(Sherlock💛). Dorothy Parker was a force, her quick intelligence. Two incredible authors. 💚📚 #arthurconandoyle #dorothyparker #shortstories #poetry #authors #classic #sherlock #smallbooks #read #books #mystery

CherryPie I used to have a bunch of those little books. Back in the nineties, I think. Big Blonde was the most memorable. 😀 6y
somebooksaround @CherryPie Same here!! - Such good book memories🙌😄 6y
16 likes3 stack adds2 comments
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BooksForYears
The Man With The Twisted Lip | Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, P. James Macaluso
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#emojinov Day 4 - 💋

Whether your lips are straight or twisted, enjoy your colors!

mabell Creative! 7y
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review
jpmcwisemorgan
The Man with the Twisted Lip | Arthur Conan Doyle
Pickpick

We got disguises with this one! I'm so glad to be #Sherlocked with so many awesome people. I just need to catch up with my posts. I keep thinking I'll do that but "stuff" happens. Mostly an obsession with Twitter but that counts as reading, right?

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InLibrisVeritas
The Man with the Twisted Lip | Arthur Conan Doyle
Pickpick

This one felt short and sweet! I liked this one even though the case itself was a light one. #Sherlocked

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AdaChivers
The Man with the Twisted Lip | Arthur Conan Doyle
Pickpick

I liked this one, but it was a little obvious...

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AdaChivers
The Man with the Twisted Lip | Arthur Conan Doyle
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Restarting slowly after a good night's sleep! How is everyone doing??
#24in48

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Kathrin
The Man with the Twisted Lip | Arthur Conan Doyle
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Mehso-so

Sherlock's explanation of how he solved the case: "by sitting upon five pillows and consuming an ounce of shag." I want to see more of the process! #Sherlocked

(Picture is not mine.)

geodynamical_nonfiction 🔥💨💡 😆 7y
33 likes1 comment
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AdaChivers
The Man with the Twisted Lip | Arthur Conan Doyle
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Another one! It's been really Fun to finally read those with you guys! #sherlocked #readalong #serialreader

jpmcwisemorgan Who hoo! 🎉 7y
34 likes1 comment
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InLibrisVeritas
The Man with the Twisted Lip | Arthur Conan Doyle
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This is our current #Sherlocked read! 4 issues in total.
#serialreader

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jpmcwisemorgan
The Man with the Twisted Lip | Arthur Conan Doyle

This should be the next story in our #Sherlocked readalong - starting either yesterday or today, depending on where you are.

Kathrin On it! 😀 7y
Daisey Ready to start tonight! 7y
33 likes2 stack adds2 comments