The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes

Front Cover
Scholastic, 2004 - Juvenile Fiction - 321 pages
A colonel receives five seeds in the mail--and dies within weeks. A young bride disappears immediately after her wedding. An old hat and a Christmas goose are the only clues to a stolen jewel. A son is accused of his father's murder. These mysteries--and many more--are brought to the house on Baker Street where detective Sherlock Holmes resides. No case is too tricky for the world's most famous sleuth and his incredible powers of deduction.

About the author (2004)

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was an English novelist who is widely known as the creator of the detective Sherlock Holmes. Doyle was also a medical doctor. His first story featuring Holmes, A Study in Scarlet, appeared in Beeton's Christmas Annual in 1887. After 1890 he pursued writing full time, completing such further Holmes adventures as The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes (1894), the popular The Hound of the Baskervilles (1902), and his last book featuring the detective, The Casebook of Sherlock Holmes (1927). Doyle wrote 4 novels and 56 stories involving Holmes. Blessed with an acute sense of deductive reasoning, Holmes, with his genial but less quick-witted companion, Dr. Watson, devises ingenious solutions to complex cases, some involving his archenemy Professor Moriarty. When Doyle tired of the detective in 1893 and attempted to kill him off, public outcry necessitated The Return of Sherlock Holmes (1904).Ironically, Doyle did not want to be remembered for his detective stories but for what he viewed as his more notable work, the historical novels Sir Nigel (1906), Micah Clarke (1889), and The White Company (1890); yet these works are less known today. Doyle also wrote other tales of mystery and adventure, including the science-fiction novels featuring Professor Challenger: The Lost World (1911; films, 1925, 1960, 1993, 1998) and The Poison Belt (1912). Knighted in 1902, Doyle wrote two pamphlets condoning England's role in the Boer War. After his son died in World War I, Doyle found comfort in the study of spiritualism and later published History of Spiritualism (2 vols., 1926-27). In 1924 his autobiographical Memories and Adventures appeared.This biography was written by D. Martin Dakin for Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia. For more information on this resource, visit Grolier Online .

Eoin Colfer was born in Wexford, Ireland on May 14, 1965. After taking a three-year degree course in Dublin, he qualified as a primary teacher in 1986. Returning to Wexford he began teaching in a local primary school by day and wrote at night. In 1991, he left Ireland and spent the next four years working in Saudi Arabia, Tunisia and Italy. Resettling in Wexford after his arrival back in Ireland, he recommenced his teaching career, continuing his habit of writing after school. His first book, Benny and Omar, was published in October 1998. His other works include Benny and Babe, the O'Brien Flyers series, and the Artemis Fowl series. He became a full-time author following the success of Artemis Fowl. The Wish List won a Bisto Merit Award in 2001. In 2015 he won an Irish Book Award in the children's category with his title Imaginary Fred.

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