Sherlock Holmes Mystery Magazine #22. Arthur Conan Doyle
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Sherlock Holmes Mystery Magazine #22 - Arthur Conan Doyle страница 2

Название: Sherlock Holmes Mystery Magazine #22

Автор: Arthur Conan Doyle

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Ужасы и Мистика

Серия:

isbn: 9781479426263

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ Mr Holmes and he says you must insert a notice in the newspapers, but he cautions you that frauds will surely surface in great number. If you provide details as to where you found the ticket and what day it was and what time, Mr Holmes will act as your intermediary and find the correct ticket purchaser. He does not expect remuneration for his services.

      Admiringly,

      Martha Hudson

      * * * *

      This issue I have chosen three recipes to share. They are in no way related. I picked them because I’m fond of them all, and so are Mr Holmes and Dr Watson. They are an American dish, broiled turkey; a favourite vegetable, roast fennel, and brandied cherries, of which Dr Watson is fond.

      BROILED TURKEY

      1 turkey, no more than two months old

      5 tablespoons of butter

      1 cup of white wine

      Salt and fresh-ground pepper

      1 1. Wash, split and dry the turkey.

      2 2. Work in the salt, pepper and two tablespoons of butter.

      3 3. Grease broiler, then put turkey on it and cook till it is brown.

      4 4. Turn over bird and cook till it also browns.

      5 5. Put turkey in a roasting pan and put dabs of 1 tablespoon of butter on it.

      6 6. Boil the wine and pour ¾ cup of it over the bird.

      7 7. Put turkey in oven and bake at 375 degrees till done, occasionally basting it.

      8 8. Pour remaining wine on bird and add rest of the butter, bring to a boil and serve.

      * * * *

      ROAST FENNEL

      2 fennel bulbs without stalks

      2 teaspoons of coconut oil

      Lemon juice

      Salt and pepper

      1 1. Heat oven to 375 degrees.

      2 2. Put foil in a baking dish.

      3 3. Cut fennel into thin strips.

      4 4. Coat fennel with coconut oil and put into the baking dish.

      5 5. Pour lemon juice on the fennel and add salt and pepper.

      6 6. Heat for 30 minutes.

      7 7. After 15 minutes, turn over the fennel.

      * * * *

      CHERRIES WITH BRANDY

      2 pounds of dark sour cherries

      2 pounds of sweet bing cherries

      3 slices of pineapple

      2 cinnamon rods

      2 tablespoons of cloves

      1 cup of sugar

      ½ cup of Hennessy cognac

      1 1. Remove cherry stems and wash the fruit.

      2 2. Make chunks of the pineapple and add to the cherries.

      3 3. Fill two 1-quart glass bottles with the fruit, leaving space at the top.

      4 4. In each bottle, place a cinnamon rod, 1 tablespoon of cloves and ½ cup of sugar.

      5 5. Pour half of the cognac in each bottle and tightly seal each.

      6 6. After 1 hour, turn each bottle over. Repeat until the sugar cannot be seen.

      7 7. Place the bottles in a cool spot and serve them 4-5 months later.

      d

      THE SCREEN OF THE CRIME

      by Kim Newman

      Sherlok Kholms

      In 2013, writer-director Andrey Kavan made a Sherlok Kholms series for Russian television, consisting of six feature-length episodes. It has turned up on youtube with fan-made sub-titles. Its approach to the Conan Doyle source material might once have been considered radical, though now it’s almost a default to throw away the deerstalker and the meticulous unflappability to present a stubbled, slovenly bipolar Holmes and a PST-suffering Watson pitted against a chaotic, corrupt world with much contemporary resonance. If you think the BBC’s current Sherlock is overshadowed by its Watson’s hard times in a more recent Afghan war than the one Doyle wrote about, imagine how Russians feel about that blood-soaked patch of the world map. Unlike Sherlock and Elementary, Sherlok Kholms doesn’t relocate the characters to a contemporary setting—but it goes further than Guy Ritchie’s films in finding Victorian parallels for the way things are today.

      In 1979, then-Soviet television produced a fond (and fondly-remembered) Adventures of Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson with Vasily Livanov and Vitaly Solomin as a genial sleuth and his intrepid sidekick. Sherlok Kholms positions itself as radically different from this show, but is structurally rather close to it—with miniseries-like overall arcs to do with the developing relationship of Holmes and Watson and the shadow of Moriarty, and key stories pulled out of canonical order and slotted in to highlight the lead characters. The older show presented its heroes in a nostalgic light—expressing a peculiarly Russian anglophilia—and stressed comradeship and noble endeavour, but the new take is complicated and sometimes uncomfortable. A sub-plot has Watson (Andrey Panin) struggling to become a writer, debating with a publisher about how to make his accounts of thorny real stories more saleable. This suggests that the versions we’re familiar with are removed from a truth we are only now being let in on. Throughout, characters say or do things this Watson could never put in print—Watson’s marriage proposal to Mrs Hudson (Ingeborna Dapkunaite) is astonishing enough without the throwaway revelation (unthinkable in any British or American Doyle adaptation) that much of the doctor’s struggling practice involves performing ‘underground abortions’. The approach has some textural precedent in that Doyle has Holmes complain about the way Watson dramatises their cases, but this goes further even than The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes or Mr Holmes in making its takes on Doyle’s characters vastly different from the ones found on the page. There’s a sustained riff on the adverse reactions of the people involved when Watson’s stories see print: Mrs Hudson resents being represented as ‘am old granny’ and gives him till the end of the month to get out of 221B ….

      The first episode, Beyker Strit, 221B (Baker Street 221B), opens with exactly the quotation about the Afghan War from A Study in Scarlet used in The Abominable Bride (‘the campaign brought honours and promotion to many but for me it had nothing but misfortune and disaster’) as Watson returns to London, ‘health irreparably damaged’, and is drawn into an alliance with Holmes. In an unusual selection, their first case is ‘Black Peter’, with Aleksandr Ilin as a suitably imposing, impaled dastard. СКАЧАТЬ