Mandala of Sherlock Holmes
by:
Jamyang Norbu (author)
A new Sherlock Holmes mystery worthy of the master Sir Arthur Conan Doyle himself. In 1891, the British public was horrified to learn that Sherlock Holmes had perished in a deadly struggle with the archcriminal Professor Moriarty at the Reichenbach Falls. Then, to its amazement, he reappeared two...
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A new Sherlock Holmes mystery worthy of the master Sir Arthur Conan Doyle himself. In 1891, the British public was horrified to learn that Sherlock Holmes had perished in a deadly struggle with the archcriminal Professor Moriarty at the Reichenbach Falls. Then, to its amazement, he reappeared two years later, informing a stunned Watson, 'I traveled for two years in Tibet, therefore, and amused myself by visiting Lhasa.' Nothing has been known of those missing years until Jamyang Norbu's discovery, in a rusting tin dispatch box in Darjeeling, of a flat packet carefully wrapped in waxed paper and neatly tied with stout twine. When opened the packet revealed Huree Chunder Mookerjee's (Kipling's Bengali spy and scholar) own account of his travels with Sherlock Holmes. Now for the first time, we learn of Holmes's brush with the Great Game and the world of Kim. We follow him north across the hot and duty plains of India to Simla, summer capital of the British Raj, and over the high passes to the vast emptiness of the Tibetan plateau. In the medieval splendor that is Lhasa, intrigue and black treachery stalk the shadows, and Sherlock Holmes confronts his greatest challenge.
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Format: paperback
ISBN:
9781582343280 (1582343284)
Publish date: January 9th 2003
Publisher: Bloomsbury
Pages no: 280
Edition language: English
Category:
Fantasy,
Adventure,
Cultural,
Historical Fiction,
Mystery,
Detective,
India,
Thriller,
Crime,
Modern,
Action
This was one of the better patische's Ive read. If you like Sherlock Holmes, then its a must-read!
This has been laying about the house for years. I finally picked it up after finishing that last James Rollins junk read. It was a good read. Norbu explicitly tips his hat to H. Rider Haggard and Rudyard Kipling in the text. In the text, the former was much more true than the latter. And there was r...
Alas. Alas and alack. The first half, three-quarters of this novel were awesome, a really lovely pastiche, maybe the best I've read so far, and the last few chapters veered off into an entirely different story that I was far less inclined to enjoy.Holmes in India, with an Indian scholar-spy filling ...