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Sherlock Holmes and the Adventure of the Sussex Vampire
Sherlock Holmes and the Adventure of the Sussex Vampire | Arthur Conan Doyle
6 posts | 4 read | 1 to read
Sherlock Holmes investigates a report of a young wife sucking the blood from her infant son. Presented in graphic novel form and includes an explanation of how Holmes' solved the mystery. Simultaneous.
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Cuilin
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Librarybelle I thought it was better fair play wise than others we read, for instance last week‘s story. There are a few threads that I don‘t recall appearing in the story, but I may have missed them. 2w
eeclayton I definitely consider it fair play. I even picked up on some of the clues, although the one with the window had me baffled, just like Watson, I had no idea that SH saw a mirror image. 2w
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CogsOfEncouragement I mean, the moment you hear there is a child from the first marriage...am I right? lol 2w
dabbe @Cuilin @Librarybelle @eeclayton @CogsOfEncouragement ... never trust the child from a 1st marriage! 🤣 I also found it kind of icky that Jack hung over his dad like a toddler would. 1w
28 likes6 comments
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Cuilin
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Librarybelle I did find it interesting that Holmes was the opposite of Conan Doyle. Maybe it has something to do with how tired Conan Doyle was with Holmes that Holmes is the opposite. However, Holmes‘s thoughts on ghosts does fit with his methodical and logical persona. 2w
eeclayton @Librarybelle I agree. It would have been weird if SH hadn't set out to find a down-to-earth, logical explanation. 2w
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CogsOfEncouragement After I finished this one last night, I looked up when it was first published. It was January 1924 in The Strand Magazine. I wondered if it was entertainment for October (but I suppose how we treat “spooky season“ is a fairly new phenomenon). As I kept googling I see that Doyle and Stoker were friends.

I wonder how widespread Doyle's beliefs were. Would SH keep bringing in $$$ if the stories took that sort of a turn? The money was the point.
2w
Cuilin @CogsOfEncouragement yes I saw Stoker and Doyle were friends. I know the loss of Doyle‘s first wife deeply affected him, which was the beginning of his interest in spirituality. I think his grief made him long for a life that wasn‘t so painful? Hence Sherlock 🤷‍♀️ 2w
dabbe @Cuilin @Librarybelle @eeclayton @CogsOfEncouragement In some of my readings, it seems that seances and such were quite the rage in the late 1800s. Doyle's loss of not only his 1st wife but the loss of his son Kingsley and other friends from WWI further enhanced his interest in spirituality later in life. He seems to have been a more rational person earlier when he created Holmes. 1w
22 likes6 comments
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Cuilin
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Librarybelle I enjoyed this one too! I did kind of hope for a true supernatural element, which would have been unique, but it was a super fun story. Maybe I think so because vampire is in the title! 😂 2w
eeclayton I enjoyed it, too. It had a Jane Eyre-ish vibe in the beginning, and I'm glad the lady didn't end up in the attic or a madhouse 😁 2w
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CogsOfEncouragement My favorite line from this one was when Watson sees his school mate is not physically what he once had been, and W states is was painful to see. The clever line that made me chuckle:
I fear that I roused corresponding emotions in him.
2w
kelli7990 I enjoyed it. 2w
Cuilin @eeclayton yes definitely a gothic vibe right down to young Jack and his poison arrow. 2w
Cuilin @Librarybelle I was hoping for a bit more Vampiric lore. 2w
Cuilin @kelli7990 it was a fun one. 2w
dabbe @Cuilin @Librarybelle @eeclayton @CogsOfEncouragement @kelli7990 Sorry I'm a little late to the party. I enjoyed this one, too--WAY more than the last one, #oy! I found it interesting that the kid's name was Jack. “Jack“ is used is many folk tales (talking to you, Jack & the Bean Stalk) and usually involved a young adult male who is a trickster or rebel of sorts. In this one, he happens to want to kill. 🤷‍♀️ The name definitely fits! 1w
20 likes10 comments
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LitsyEvents
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Repost for @dabbe

Fabulous discussion and insight yesterday, Sherlockians! We're getting closer to the end! Next up: “(TAo) The Sussex Vampire.“ Discussion will be this coming Saturday, 6/7, and will be led by @Cuilin. Have a good week. 🤗

Link to summary and analysis (spoiler alert!): https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ZbyHAZrTXjmnC6KRzh5x6YdASAOmncCq/view?usp=shari...

dabbe TY! 😍 2w
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dabbe
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#NoPlaceLikeHolmes
@Cuilin @LitsyEvents

Fabulous discussion and insight yesterday, Sherlockians! We're getting closer to the end! Next up: “(TAo) The Sussex Vampire.“ Discussion will be this coming Saturday, 6/7, and will be led by @Cuilin. Have a good week. 🤗

Link to summary and analysis (spoiler alert!): https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ZbyHAZrTXjmnC6KRzh5x6YdASAOmncCq/view?usp=shari...

Librarybelle Thank you! 2w
dabbe @Librarybelle YW! 😍 2w
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ChaoticMissAdventures
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#scarathlon #photochallenge #vampire @Clwojick @StayCurious

These short Sherlock adventures are good for an hour but often lack substance. I wonder what it was like back in the day when these stories came out in a few installments in the newspaper.

bthegood Today with libraries and online book availability we may see books differently - if we had more limited choices we would probably really look forward to any opportunity to read a novel/short story (good or bad)- 👻 (edited) 2y
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