Regular marked price: $13.95Discount Price: $11.16
Cost Savings: $2.79 (20%)Price fluctuation possible.
How soon does it ship: Normal ship time within one day
Shipping? Absolutely FREE if you qualify for Super Saver Shipping.
Type of bind: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
EAN num: 9780393311198
ISBN number: 0393311198
Label: W. W. Norton & Company
Manufacturer: W. W. Norton & Company
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 224
Printing Date: 1993-09
Publishing house: W. W. Norton & Company
Sale Popularity Level: 225374
Studio: W. W. Norton & Company
Other books you might be interested in perusing:
Editor's Notes and Comments:
Product Description:
Back in print to tie-in with The Canary Trainer, this 'rediscovered' Sherlock Holmes adventure recounts the unique collaboration of Holmes and Sigmund Freud in the solution of a mystery on which the lives of millions may depend.
User popularity level:

Rated by buyers
-
Dreadful! And not in a good way! I tend not to like latter-day Holmesian stories of this stripe, but I truly read this one with an open heart and again and again I cringed and shook my head at one mistake after another. How anyone can claim to be an authority on the Holmes canon---and what's worse, be called an authority---and commit all the blatant errors in fact and principle this author does is stunning. For every mildly interesting bit presented in this hackish abomination, there were untold aggravations and blasphemies. Plus, balls, it's not even that good of a book. Don't waste your time here. Read or re-read one of the originals!
I had my friend shoot The Seven-Per-Cent Solution with my grandpa's WWII-era M1. An execution it richly deserved. May it rest in pieces!
Rated by buyers
-
For a non-canon story, this one is quite good. At the begin Holmes is in one of his cocaine fuelled bouts of depression he gets when inactive. Watson has to someone manage to get him to Sigmund Freud, who restores his state of mind. Then, they have to team up to stop a serious problem of the super villain variety.
Rated by buyers
-
Very clever--good, smart fun. An enjoyable, easy read.
Rated by buyers
-
This novel wasn't quite the knockout its cover blurbs promised, but it remains a fairly entertaining bit of literary ledgerdemain.
Dr. John Watson, now established and married, is visited by his erstwhile companion in crime-solving, Sherlock Holmes, who rants and raves about being stalked by his old math teacher. Moriarity. Watson soon discovers that Holmes is delusional due to his cocaine addiction. Eventually he enlists the aid of famed psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud. However, Holmes's addiction is the least of their problems. The trio fall into a mystery whose ramifications could mean the very destruction of the world itself.
I think it is the artificially antique prose style that prevented me from falling in love with this novel. It sounds too much like one author aping the voice of another, and the result is a little less than convincing. It is all too earnest. Had Meyer taken Watson's voice in a slightly different direction, then this might truly have been special and memorable.
Rated by buyers
-
I was quite pleased with the book, being an actual reprint of the original one published in the 70's, which I had read before purchasing this copy. However, my feelings are kind of mixed, because Meyer 'edited' Watson's original work of the ending, matching it up to one of the plot devices that was used in the movie of the same name. I don't really know what to think of it, as it makes it clearer than the original version, but still - why make it coincide with the movie?
Besides that, I love the journey of Sherlock Holmes through his rehab period, and the interaction between Freud and Holmes is entertaining and, despite Holmes's behavior in the original canon, quite human. Even if you have never read any Sherlock Holmes, here is a good springboard to get you started into the adventures of the world's greatest consulting detective.
Find other books like this one: