Classic horror would also work. Or Genre: mystery. In addition, there are at least two printings, including the 1996 Penguin, that have a full moon on the cover, so it could qualify for that square.
I have the book and I haven't read it in a while. I might join in, although I won't be joining the bingo. Horror in all its varieties is not my thing. And I don't remember The Hound as horror. I thought it was a mystery, slightly horror-flavored.
That's the angle I'm coming from Olga - mysteries with a slight horror flavour; I know there's some Poe I can read and enjoy, so I'll choose one of his short stories for the Classic Horror. There's a lot of the old gothic romance that would qualify for the gothic square (Whitney et. al.) that I know I'll enjoy too. Luckily MM encourages us to be creative. :)
I've never read any Sherlock Holmes before, but I DO own an Audible audio book called The Complete Sherlock Holmes, narrated by Simon Vance (I needed to spend one last credit before cancelling my paid subscription, and I love Simon Vance). Looks like The Hound of the Baskervilles is part of the collection, so I'd love to join this buddy read!
Noting some of the squares Broken Tune mentioned above helps, too, cause I'm still looking for books to fit some of the squares.
"Supernatural"
"It was a Dark and Stormy Night"
"Gothic"
I was actually looking back: read by flashlight, or free space are free now that the Vision reread is a BR. Yay.
Noting some of the squares Broken Tune mentioned above helps, too, cause I'm still looking for books to fit some of the squares.