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Holmes Coming

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Dr. Amy Winslow tells the story: in foggy, nighttime San Francisco a jogging SFPD captain is savagely attacked by a Bengal tiger which then vanishes. In her ER, Amy labors unsuccessfully to save the captain's life, then consoles his aggrieved closest friend, Lt. Luis Ortega. Neither suspects their lives will intertwine in a life-or-death mystery.

The next day, checking on former patient Mrs. Hudson at her Victorian house isolated in Marin County's forest, Amy discovers in the cellar a secret, cobweb-covered 1899 electrochemical laboratory containing a Jules Verne–esque steam-punk sarcophagus out of which springs a wild-eyed, half-mummified, crypt-keeper-like man who injects himself with something before falling dead at her feet. Amy barely revives him.

He claims to be a real-life Victorian master chemist and detective named Holmes, who allowed Conan Doyle to write stories based on his cases, though was slightly annoyed when Doyle changed his real first name to the catchier Sherlock. Becoming uninspired by 1890s crime, Holmes devised this method to hibernate for a century to investigate future mysteries.

Amy assumes he's a lunatic. His Scotland Yard identity papers were stolen while he slept, so it takes her a while to realize his amazing story is true.

Respectably handsome when cleaned up, Holmes is still the same brash, egoistic, über-English, cocaine-addicted, non-feminist genius—but now a century out of sync—so his still-brilliant deductions are sometimes laughably or dangerously wrong. Holmes and Amy, his reluctant new Watson, find themselves unexpectedly attracted to each other while perilously involved in reclaiming his proof of identity, aided by cyber-savvy street teen Zapper. It's all connected to the horrific death-by-tiger, only the first of several bizarre, mystifying murders being committed by an exquisitely fiendish descendant of Holmes' Victorian archenemy, Professor Moriarty.

The tone is classic Holmes—plus a refreshing twist of fish-out-of-water humor with a surprising spark of real romance.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 5, 2022
      Screenwriter Johnson (The Bionic Woman) updates the plot and premise he first employed in his 1993 TV film, 1994 Baker Street: Sherlock Holmes Returns, with disappointing results. San Francisco pediatrician Amy Winslow is visiting a former patient, Mrs. Hudson, when a power outage affects a secret chamber in Mrs. Hudson’s basement, triggering the defrosting of a man who claims to be Sherlock Holmes, who froze himself in 1899 with the intent of returning to the world in 2025. Winslow’s skepticism at this fantastic account is gradually surmounted, and she joins him in probing some vicious murders involving a tiger that may be the work of a Moriarty descendant. The book’s conceit wasn’t even original in 1993, as a 1987 TV movie, The Return of Sherlock Holmes, also involved the revival of a suspended-animation Holmes. Awkward prose (“The Woman’s beautiful visage flitted through his brain again, gazing deeply into his eyes with a puckish twinkle in her own violet ones”) doesn’t help. Those interested in the iconic detective functioning in the modern age will be better off with Benedict Cumberbatch in the Sherlock TV series. Agent: Renee Fountain, Gandolfo Helin & Fountain Literary Management.

    • Library Journal

      September 1, 2022

      Johnson (The Darwin Variant) has been telling great stories in television, film, and print since the 1970s; his latest novel takes on the iconic Sherlock Holmes. A police detective is attacked on the streets of San Francisco by a tiger, and that is only the start of seemingly unconnected and strange deaths. Dr. Amy Winslow knew one of the victims. On a house call in an isolated house, she discovers a hidden laboratory with a strange man. He believes he is the famous detective who was able to lower his body temperature for over a hundred years so he could use his keen intellect for the future. She doesn't believe him at first, but the more she works with him, the more she starts to believe he is the real man written about by Arthur Conan Doyle. VERDICT "Sherlock in modern times" has been done, but having the actual character adapt to modern times is a fresh take on the detective. Johnson nails Holmes's voice, and his relationship with a new doctor to tell his story is fun and engaging. Fans of the original adventures of Sherlock Holmes will enjoy.--Jeff Ayers

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      September 1, 2022
      Sherlock Holmes is alive--and living in San Francisco! In a brief "Author's Apology" at the beginning of the book, ER physician Amy Winslow maintains that the story she's about to tell, however outlandish, is true. While taking his early morning jog, SFPD Detective Donald Keating suffers a bizarre attack from a Bengal tiger. He's rushed to Saint Francis Memorial Hospital, where Winslow is unable to save him. Still shaken by this bizarre episode, Winslow responds to a distress call from former patient Estelle Hudson, an elderly Scot who lives alone in a Victorian house in Marin County. Mrs. Hudson, who's in a reminiscent mood, regales Winslow with stories from her past that culminate in an unexpected appeal to Winslow to buy the house and the unveiling of a secret room where dwells...Hubert Holmes, the real-life inspiration for the fictional Sherlock, kept alive for more than 100 years by a complicated chemical formula. Johnson clearly knows and respects his source material, though his plot is slowed by stories from Holmes full of references to 19th-century notables that, however clever, should appeal primarily to Doyle aficionados. But with a second bizarre murder and the disappearance of Keating's partner, Luis Ortega, the game is definitely afoot. Naturally, a Moriarty emerges, and even Scotland Yard is thrown into the mix. Winslow's plummy narrative voice is a satisfying imitation of Dr. Watson's; additional pleasures of this confection come from Doyle-inspired updates, like the young Zapper, an Artful Dodger type who's the foremost of the San Francisco Holmes' Baker Street Irregulars. Splashy Holmes redux executed with skill and style.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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