I'll fill a vacant peg, then. |
I've always loved the opening of "The Adventure of the Crooked Man" when Holmes shows up, unexpectedly at near midnight, invites himself to stay over for the night, and then proceeds to keep an exhausted Watson up for a while longer to explain the case the two of them will work on in a few hours. Exhausted Watson perks right up, of course, because Sherlock Holmes is usually the most interesting and invigorating thing in the room. Watson's tiredness dissipates and he is ready for whatever "exceptional features of interest" are waiting for them in Aldershot. Holmes sometimes fills a vacancy like no one else quite can.
This past week I felt Watson's weariness. It had been a long week of too many tasks, and a 48 hour road trip with two young dogs, and a painful accidental head bash with some lasting side effects. I needed something to help the weariness dissipate. I needed some features of interest. And while Sherlock Holmes did not turn up on my doorstep at midnight, he did send some wonderful envoys to my desktop: the always engaging discussion leader Bob Katz and the rest of the Crew of the Barque Lone Star; the Worldwide Doyle 2024 speakers of wonder: Ross Davies, Mark Jones, Paul Chapman, and Mattias Boström; and the inimitable Monica Schmidt in the company of The Bimetallic Question.
They brought enough Sherlock Holmes (and Arthur Conan Doyle) to "fill a vacant peg, then." Sunday, Monday and Tuesday, "Smack! smack! smack! Three gone before you could wink!"
Sunday: As part of the many fun parts of a Barque Lone Star meeting, Bob Katz asked some very leading questions about the major characters of "The Problem of Thor Bridge." He had the Zoom audience in his hands; the man is a natural born speaker and leader. I'm still thinking about his idea that with THOR, Doyle created an outdoor locked-room mystery. This idea never, ever would have occurred to me. It is a bloody brilliant bit of thinking and I'm still pondering it these several days later.
Monday: As a part of Worldwide Doyle 2024, Ross Davies, Mark Jones and Paul Chapman presented a wonderful program about Doyle, his (sometimes unwelcome) involvement with the British military, his caring for the everyday soldier, and how the bicycle shaped his thinking in many ways. The group then surprised the audience with the reveal of a tantalizing photo (of Sherlock Holmes?!) from the Doyle Salisbury Plain photo album. I can hardly wait for my postcards adorned with the photo to arrive from Portsmouth.
"In the whirl of our incessant activity it has often been difficult for me, as the reader has probably observed, to round off my narratives, and to give those final details which the curious might expect..."--SOLI