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When I first heard of The Big Bow Mystery (1892) by Israel Zangwill, I legitimately thought it was about a big, y’know, bow — the fancy knot one ties in a piece of ribbon. I also anticipated, given its era, that it would be a dry and soulless tale which would dully wander its way to an obvious conclusion — and, well, I couldn’t have been more wrong on both counts. This story of a man found with his throat slit in his locked bedroom in Bow in London’s East End is, I’m delighted to find after a 15-year gap, still fresh, humorous, and remarkably readable. Indeed, as a novel, it might arguably be the most successful impossible crime story ever written, so wonderfully does it retain its pace, lightness, and acuity.
#1393: A Reading Round-Up of 2025
I don’t make a reading round-up post an annual occurrence on The Invisible Event, but particularly wanted to do one today if only because I read 164 books in 2025, which is the most in a single year in the existing archives.
Continue reading#1392: No Police Like Holmes/Minor Felonies – Young Sherlock: Death Cloud (2010) by Andrew Lane
A final non-canonical Sherlock Holmes story this month, with Death Cloud (2010) by Andrew Lane being aimed at the 8 to 12 year-old market and setting up some Minor Felonies posts for Tuesdays in January.
Continue reading#1391: Department of Exciting News – Jonathan Creek: The Fantom of the Acropolis (2026) by David Renwick
While not quite the Jonathan Creek news we might have been hoping for, yesterday I stumbled over a crowdfunding project on Kickstarter that is really rather exhilarating: the publication of a new stage play in the canon by none other than series creator David Renwick.
Continue reading#1390: “Circumstances might arise when a murder would be the only way out of a difficulty.” – Continental Crimes [ss] (2017) ed. Martin Edwards
Christmas is done for another year, and so my mind turns to the summer holidays and the possibilities of Europe. Yeah, it’s early to be planning this sort of thing, but I like to be prepared. And so naturally it is the British Library’s collection Continental Crimes [ss] (2017) that I crack open for research
Continue reading#1389: Truth Comes Limping (1938) by J.J. Connington
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How better to commemorate the birth of one J.C. than by exploring the work of another? And so to Truth Comes Limping (1938), the seventeenth mystery by Alfred Walter Stewart writing as J.J. Connington and the thirteenth to feature his detective Chief Constable Sir Clinton Driffield. And, once more with this author, I find myself swimming against the apparent direction of opinion: Nick Fuller rated this at 2/5, Martin Edwards calls it “very disappointing”, and Curtis Evans dismisses it as a “lackluster mystery plot with dull characters and turgid writing”. And so, of course, I really rather enjoyed it — sure, it’s at the weaker end of the four-star ratings I’ve given Connington elsewhere, but for sheer Humdrum delights it’s rather fine.
#1388: No Police Like Holmes – The Whole Art of Detection: Lost Mysteries of Sherlock Holmes [ss] (2017) by Lyndsay Faye
Lest we forget, I was not enamoured of Lyndsay Faye’s Sherlock Holmes novel Dust and Shadow (2009), but her characterisation was strong, people seem to rate her pastiches, and Holmes arguably finds his firmest feet in the short stories. And so to Faye’s anthology of Holmes stories The Whole Art of Detection [ss] (2017) do we turn today.
Continue reading#1387: “I shall be the one who decides what I must do!” – Murder at Christmas (2025) by G.B. Rubin
Another Choose Your Own Adventure-style mystery from an established novelist, Murder at Christmas (2025) by G.B. Rubin being the work of Gareth Rubin, who recently published Sherlock Holmes novel Holmes and Moriarty (2024). And this one’s Christmas-themed! So let’s dive in…
Continue reading#1386: Case with No Conclusion (1939) by Leo Bruce
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Another man accused of murder, another family member going to an amateur detective to prove his innocence. The classics don’t wear, do they? This time it is Stewart Ferrers accused of murdering local GP Dr. Benson late at night in his own home, and Stewart’s brother Peter who goes to ex-Sergeant Wm. Beef, now set up as a private enquiry agent, in the hope that evidence can be uncovered to cast doubt on the conviction. And along for the ride is Beef’s faithful-if-frustrated chronicler Townsend (now called Lionel despite calling himself Stuart at the end of the previous novel…) who hopes that something interesting might come of this to put him on equal footing with other novelists who relate the cases of their famous detectives.
#1385: No Police Like Holmes – Blood and Ink (2016) by Adam Christopher
One of only a handful of tie-in novels I’ve read, Adam Christopher’s The Ghost Line (2015) did an excellent job of tapping into the feeling of Elementary (2012-19), the US TV version of the updating of Sherlock Holmes. And so to Christopher’s second and final novel for the series, Blood and Ink (2016), do we turn today.
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