As World War I rages, Holmes serves, solves, and spies, and Watson faithfully records.
Fifty years after topping bestseller lists with The Seven-Per-Cent Solution, which put Sherlock Holmes’ drug addiction front and center, Meyer continues to offer his own puckishly provocative version of the legendary sleuth. In his sixth resuscitation of Holmes, sturdily narrated once more by Dr. John Watson, the detective is a war hero, a fighter for social justice, and something of a diplomat as well as a brilliant crime reconstructor who solves the baffling shipboard murder that provides a trans-Atlantic version of the traditional locked-room mystery. The tale begins in 1916, when Watson is treating casualties of World War I, in which Holmes valiantly served and was injured. They debate the case of Roger Casement, an Irish nationalist currently on trial in Britain for treason. Casement, like many other characters here, was a real historical figure. Meyer weaves him into the episodic narrative along with sly Alice Roosevelt Longworth, U.S. Ambassador to Mexico Henry Fletcher, and several others, and includes vintage photos and documents as well. The Sherlockian mystery is solid and delightful on its own, but Meyer’s portrait of this moment in history adds a surprising and fascinating bonus. An additional meta layer is provided by an imaginative introduction in the form of a letter Meyer receives from a Japanese industrialist, along with the pages of Watson’s diary that account for the bulk of the novel.
Ingenious international froth studded with historical tidbits.