Showing posts with label Sherlock Holmes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sherlock Holmes. Show all posts

Thursday, September 7, 2023

Adventures in Book Research by Vicki Delany

Jenn McKinlay: I'm absolutely chuffed to have our friend Vicki Delany visit us today to talk about her upcoming travels and plots and tea!  

Vicki Delany: I’ve been reading this marvelous blog for a long time, and I’ve noticed something: If there’s one thing the Reds love it’s Britain and Ireland, and food. 

What a coincidence, because I love those things too.

As it happens, I’m traveling to England next month to do location research for not one, but two, of my books. 

First stop will be Halifax in Yorkshire. I’ve been to the UK many times, but never to Halifax. 

In the Tea by the Sea series from Kensington Books, the point is made (many times) that the grandmother character, Rose, once was a kitchen maid in a stately home near Halifax. She collided with a visiting American by the name of Eric Campbell coming out of a shop in that city, and visited him in hospital. When he was released, the relationship blossomed, they married, and Rose moved to Iowa where they raised their family. 

For book six in the series, I have the brilliant idea of Rose returning to Thornecroft Castle, for Lady Frockmorton’s 100th birthday celebrations. Of course, being an elderly lady, Rose can’t travel on her own so her granddaughter, Lily Roberts, the series protagonist, comes with her. What do you know: by total coincidence Lily’s neighbour, Matt, a true crime writer, is doing research in Yorkshire at the same time and Lily’s friend Bernie has gone with him. By even more of a coincidence, Lily’s love interest, the English gardener, Simon, has returned to England at the end of his contract at Victoria-On-Sea, Rose’s Cape Cod B&B, and has a job at a stately home near Halifax. 

Thus, off goes Vicki, to Halifax to check it all out. I’m throwing monetary caution to the wind and staying at a hotel I’m hoping to use as the inspiration for Thornecroft Castle (not a castle but an 18th century house built on the remains of a castle).  I chose Holdsworth house (Luxury Hotel West Yorkshire - Holdsworth House Hotel & Restaurant). If you’ve seen the TV show Last Tango in Halifax (which is great, with a fabulous cast including Sarah Lancaster, Nicola Walker, Anne Reid, Derick Jacobi), some scenes were filmed at that very hotel.  

For you British TV lovers (that includes me) Happy Valley and Gentleman Jack, among many others, were also filmed in near Halifax. I’m hoping to get to Shibden House, Anne Lister’s home, when there.  (Shibden Hall | Calderdale Museums). I’m excited about seeing the exact location for Thorncliffe Castle as well as the areas my characters will see and visit.

And, of course, because the Tea by the Sea series is about afternoon tea, they will be having tea. Meaning, I have to find the best places to go. 

A future book in the Sherlock Holmes Bookshop series from Crooked Lane Books will also be set in England as the gang travel to London for Pippa and Grant’s wedding. 

I have been to London a few times, and went in 2017 for an earlier Sherlock Holmes book, A Murder is  Game is Afoot. That time I found the house where Gemma’s parents live and a nice hotel for my characters to stay in. 

London research is more about tube time-tables and stations, and the time it takes to from X to Y by foot or taxi than the scenery or castle ruins. I’m going to give Pippa and Grant a flat in Greenwich, for the precise reason that I’ve never been to Greenwich. So I’ll have to check it out.

Gemma will be in London for her sister’s wedding and to solve a mystery, but Jayne Wilson, her ever loyal and always confused best friend, will be hoping to sample the delights of that city. And for Jayne, that includes afternoon tea.



My daughter Alex, who’s coming with me, and I are already searching out the perfect locations for afternoon tea in London.
Book research: It’s a tough job, but someone has to do it. 

Reds and Readers, I bet you know all the best places for tea and other English delights. Any suggestions? 

Alex and I are heavy into tradition when it comes to afternoon tea, but we’re always open to new and interesting things. Anyone have a must-see destination in or near Halifax? A favourite restaurant in London? Remember, it’s all in the cause of research. 😊



Vicki Delany is one of Canada’s most prolific and varied crime writers and a national bestseller in the U.S. She has written more than forty books: clever cozies to Gothic thrillers to gritty police procedurals, to historical fiction and novellas for adult literacy. She is currently writing four cozy mystery series: the Year Round Christmas books for Crooked Lane, the Tea by the Sea mysteries for Kensington, the Sherlock Holmes Bookshop series for Crooked Lane Books, and the Lighthouse Library series (as Eva Gates) for Crooked Lane.

Vicki is a past president of the Crime Writers of Canada and co-founder and organizer of the Women Killing It Crime Writing Festival. Her work has been nominated for the Derringer, the Bony Blithe, the Ontario Library Association Golden Oak, and the Arthur Ellis Awards.

Vicki is the recipient of the 2019 Derrick Murdoch Award for contributions to Canadian crime writing. She lives in Prince Edward County, Ontario.

You can find out more about her many wonderful series at: www.vickidelany.com



Friday, June 9, 2023

What’s So Irregular About A Detective? (And A Little Quiz, Too!) by Jeri Westerson

JULIA SPENCER-FLEMING: Jeri Westerson is one of our faves here at Jungle Red Writers, in part because she has so many toys in her toy box. Medieval noir? Yep. 14th century conman? Uh huh. Romantic urban fantasy? You bet. Victorian steampunk? She's got it. Honestly, that's not even scratching the surface. Suffice to say, whatever genre you like, Jeri has a book for you - she's like a giant heart full of chocolates, except the chocolates are novels and Jeri is not made of shiny red cardboard.

I was so thrilled when she told me about her new series, the Irregular Detective Mysteries, because like a lot of you, I love a good Sherlock Holmes pastiche. Not only is she telling us all about it today, but one lucky reader will get a free copy of The Isolated Séance!

 

 

 

My newest series is a Sherlockian one. But it’s not all about Holmes but somewhat Sherlock adjacent, called An Irregular Detective Mystery. It has nothing to do with one’s fiber intake. It’s about one of Holmes’ former Baker Street Irregulars, Tim Badger, who is now an adult and starting his own detective agency with a friend of his, Ben Watson (no relation to Dr. Watson). Though working under the shadow of Holmes only gets them out-flanked and just a step behind…until they find a case Holmes won’t take. 

 

Dr. Watson describes the original Baker Street Irregulars in A Study in Scarlet as “half a dozen of the dirtiest and most ragged street Arabs that ever I clapped eyes on.” To which Holmes remarked, “There’s more work to be got out of one of those little beggars than out of a dozen of the force.”

And he’s right, of course. He put those fellows to work.

Led by their “dirty little lieutenant” Wiggins, these street kids of all ages, usually under the age of eighteen, could go all over London, unnoticed…unseen…and listen in on the docks, in keyholes, on roof tops—and report back to Holmes. It was good work for a kid from the slums. And likely, the best they might ever have.

In which stories did they appear? Really only three.

 

 

           A Study in Scarlet  Written in 1887 but set in 1881, they managed to locate and bring the prime suspect and cabman Jefferson Hope to Baker Street and to Holmes’ clutches.

           The Sign of Four – Holmes sends them out to find the steamship Aurora for a handsome reward.

           The Crooked Man – Holmes sends out one Irregular named Simpson, to watch over Henry Wood’s lodgings.

 

And in just three stories, Doyle managed to capture the imagination of readers for decades to come, and have us thinking about these street urchins who are suddenly glad to be appreciated for who they are and what they can achieve with their wits and their knowledge of the lowest places in London. There’s a bit of the Artful Dodger about the Baker Street Irregulars and that’s not accidental. Though this is not Dickens’ London anymore, it’s still the Victorian period (1837 to 1901), and Dickens was published from 1836 to 1870. Sherlock Holmes didn’t appear on the scene till 1887. It’s a different London in many respects…but also the same in many respects. And that comes down to how the poor were treated.

With the creation of the 1834 Poor Law, workhouses were born. The intention was a good one. It was the execution that faltered. It was a way for the government to care for the poor, to give them food and shelter out of the weather, but also to put them to work, because in many ways, the morality of the day was to blame the poor for their lot (is this ringing familiar?) and in order to give them a proper reset, they would work off their debts in the poor house.

Even in Scrooge’s day, the average man knew what a failure the workhouses were to help the poor and treat them humanely. Because if they didn’t find a place in a workhouse, they had few other options.

But one of those options was a Penny Sit-up for the night. No, not doing sit-ups, but for a penny you could actually sit up on a hard wooden bench in a corridor for the night, to try to sleep in that position.  

 

If you had tuppence, that is, two pennies, you could do a Penny Hang-over. Nothing to do with over-indulging with booze, but instead literally hanging over a rope all night to (try) to sleep. One could cram in high numbers of people hanging over a rope instead of allowing them to lie on the floor. And to make sure they didn’t overstay their welcome, the rope would be let down at 5 or 6 am. 

 

However, the Salvation Army had coffins so you could lie on the floor. Not actual coffins, but slender rectangular-shaped boxes (no lids) laid out row on row tight together, and for four to five pennies a night, you’d get to sleep in that with an oil cloth over you, which might even include a cup of tea and a piece of bread. Fancy.  

 

Now, the new series isn’t as dark and dingy as these examples of poverty, but the main characters do have to rise out of their own circumstances—with a little help from the guv’nor—and use their wits and natural cleverness to solve their cases.

And now, a little quiz for you to solve. Let’s see how much you know about the Sherlock Holmes stories. Are you ready for a brief quiz? Answers below the video.

 

1.     What was Doyle’s original name for Sherlock Holmes?

a.      Sorenson Holmes

b.     Sherrinford Holmes

c.      It was always going to be “Sherlock” Holmes

2.     What was Holmes’ dog’s name?

a.      Toby

b.     Betsy

c.      Neither of the above

3.     Holmes’ older brother’s name was

a.      Bycroft

b.     Zoloft

c.      Mycroft

4.     Holmes’ older brother was a member of

a.      The Diogenes Club

b.     The Auto Club

c.      The National Geographic Society

5.     Who was Holmes’ landlady?

a.      Mrs. Tyne

b.     Mrs. Hudson

c.      Mrs. Avon

6.     Who were the only named Baker Street Irregulars?

a.      Fenster and Lewis

b.     Cagney and Lacey

c.      Wiggins and Simpson

 

 

Answers to the quiz.

1.     b. Sherrinford. In the original notes of Doyle’s rough draft of A Study in Scarlet, he toys with the name “Sherrinford Holmes”.

2.     c. Holmes never owned a dog himself. But he did borrow one from time to time. A dog named Toby, owned by a Mr. Sherman in The Sign of Four: The dog was an “ugly long haired, lop-eared creature, half spaniel and half lurcher, brown and white in colour, with a very clumsy waddling gait.”

3.     c. Mycroft

4.     a. Mycroft belonged to the Diogenes club.

5.     b. Though she didn’t have a name in A Study in Scarlet she soon got the name of “Mrs. Hudson.” Extra points for recognizing that the all the names in number five are also river names.

6.     c. Wiggins and Simpson. We don’t know their first names.  


JULIA: What do you love about Holmes pastiches, dear readers? Let us know, and one lucky commentor will win a copy of The Isolated Séance!

Sunday, February 21, 2021

Book to screen: Hits and misses

HALLIE EPHRON: I’m sure I’m not the only mystery reader who’s been variously delighted or dismayed by the different actors who’ve portrayed iconic fictional sleuths. My all time favorites include Leo McKern as Rumpole of the Bailey, Helen Mirren as Jane Tennison, and John Thaw as the quintessential Morse. I also love the entire cast of detective on NEW TRICKS. Until they changed up the actors and it went downhill.

Also less than a rousing success was Katherine Heigl’s Stephanie Plum. Tom Cruise felt violently miscast as Jack Reacher. Hopefully Amazon’s new Jack Reacher show will be truer to the character with Alan Ritchson in the role -- at least he’s got the height and he once played a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle.

A ton of actors have played Hercule Poirot, including:
- Peter Ustinov
- Albert Finney
- Kenneth Branagh
- David Suchet
- John Malkovich

… and Miss Marple has been portrayed numersouly by:
- Margaret Rutherford
- Angela Lansbury
- Joan Hickson
- Julia McKenzie
- Geraldine McEwan)

And then Sherlock Holmes who has probably been portrayed more times than any fictional character by, among others:
- Basil Rathbone
- Christopher Plummer
- Michael Caine
- Jeremy Brett
- Robert Downey Jr.
- Benedict Cumberbatch)

What have been the hits and misses for you when it comes to seeing an actor play a favorite fictional detective, and what made the difference? I know whom I’d give stars and who’d get raspberries.

Tuesday, December 1, 2020

The Women of MURDER IN OLD BOMBAY; a guest post by Nev March

 Julia Spencer-Fleming: As you might guess, I have a soft spot for the winners of the Minotaur Best First Mystery contests. Steve Hamilton, Donna Andrews, Michael Koryta and I all started our careers by winning one of the awards, and now it's Nev March's turn, with Murder in Old Bombay.

Reviews for her debut historical, set in 1890s India, use words like "sumptous," "thrilling," "authentic" and "lyrical." Robin Agnew, of the beloved Aunt Agatha's Books, named Murder in Old Bombay one of the Top Ten Mysteries of 2020. (You'll have a chance to judge for yourself - we're giving away a copy to one lucky commenter!)

 Murder in Old Bombay is an own-voices dive into gender, caste and colonialism, all wrapped in a clever mystery tackled by Anglo-Indian army captain Jim Agnihotri, who loves Sherlock Holmes stories. He's a man accustomed to a man's world, but, as Nev march tells us, he has to immerse himself in the lives of 19th century Indian women to solve his case.



My novel Murder in Old Bombay is a hunt for justice that uncovers both, a secret plot and the not-so-secret ways that women in India were--and sometimes still are--devalued. However, I did not begin with a plan to write about it.

In India, crime against women takes uniquely peculiar forms: dowry deaths of brides burned in so-called kitchen accidents because their father could not pay a larger dowry to greedy in-laws, the honor killing of daughters who had the temerity to run off with a lower caste lover, and more. In recent years the rape and murder of women in India has risen to outrageous levels. Decades ago, while still in college I heard about awful incidents that were never reported; police were ill-prepared to deal with rape victims, and the prevalent notion was that the victim was somehow responsible—she ‘asked for it’ by leading on the perpetrator, dressed provocatively, or put herself at risk by being at an unsafe place. Perhaps the recent rise in numbers is apparent because women now come forward to report crimes that were previously hushed up.

Traditional cultures tend to overvalue males for their ability to earn and support families, so it’s no surprise that attitudes of entitlement over women are more prevalent in India, the largest county of Southeast Asia. The reality is appalling: a World Health Organization study found that whopping 37.7% of women in Southeast Asia were victims of intimate partner violence, the highest percent of any country. If one includes assaults by strangers, 40.2% of Southeast Asian women were victims of violence, second only to Africa. However, when you live in such an environment even this seems ordinary, so I did not plan to write about it, but only wondered whether I could solve a hundred year old mystery, the death of two wealthy young women in Bombay.

In Murder in Old Bombay, young detective Captain Jim searches for the murderers of two young women killed in broad daylight in the middle of a University. Although three men were tried for the crime, they were acquitted for lack of an eyewitness. As Captain Jim hunts through the maze of evidence, he uncovers darker secrets and a plot in plain sight, unremarkable because it’s a culture where women have less worth, less authority over themselves, less substance. 

Girl making roti on a wood fire (Pinterest)

To bring this into focus, I introduced Chutki, a child prostitute. While travelling across the North Indian plains, Captain Jim comes across a tragic waif who’s been bartered from hand to hand yet still maintains an odd sort of self-composure, and he wins her loyalty. The girl Chutki is based on a young woman I saw begging on the road near Bandra Station, Mumbai. Having been trained to avoid eye-contact, I walked past, ignoring her, but as I waited for the bus I could not help watching her. Looking barely fifteen years old, she sat cross-legged before a pillar wearing an old cotton sari whose pullu covered the infant in her lap. Her gaze rose, dull, unseeing, and caught mine--what despair it revealed! Agonizing over the little cash I carried, I felt a kinship with that bedraggled girl. Then her chin rose, and with it, a sense of composure, of dignity. She would not give up on herself yet. The bus arrived while I debated leaving my place in line to hand her some money, and I was jostled up the stairs to cram into a seat. That child-mother passed from my sight but has stayed in my memory to become Chutki, a minor character who became the fulcrum of my novel as she demonstrates the true meaning of courage in a world that does not value her.

 ‘Unidentified Parsi lady’ by Raja Ravi 

Verma-- private collection of Vanita Bhandari

Hired by the Framji family, Captain Jim meets Adi, the widower, and Diana. Adi’s sister Diana epitomizes the educated young woman in the late 1800s, comfortable in her own social position and privilege. To an educated girl, how the restrictions on women must have chafed! Diana wants to use her abilities to help the investigation, but soon runs afoul of her family’s ‘rules’. These rules govern her movements--where she can go and who she can meet--protecting her modesty, marriageability and her safety. But Diana is no weak Victorian miss—her zeal, her inventiveness, and her education in England was inspired by real-life lady lawyer Cornelia Sorabji, who wrote five books including Memories, published in 1934. Diana’s use of her social connections and understanding of state politics are also inspired by Ms. Sorabji’s adventures. Like many young women I grew up with, Diana’s bold actions often land her in hot soup. Must she be rescued like some pale damsel? No, during her time in England, Diana has encountered trouble already, and it has hardened her, with surprising results.

Being a military man, Captain Jim thinks in terms of hierarchy. While Adi ‘reports’ to his father Burjor, what Captain Jim does not realize is that landowner and patriarch Burjor reports to his unassuming wife Mrs. Framji. In many ways the character of Mrs. Framji is based on my mother Silloo.

Decking the Bride: 1893 Painting of Parsi 

ladies by Raja Ravi Verma

When I left India in 1991, my mother wept. Yet she’d been determined that I should go. “Build a new life in the USA, further your education and reach your full potential,” she said.

We were more than mother-daughter. She once said, “When I was little, I had no sisters to talk with. So I asked God for a daughter and he gave me two!” That bond strengthened as I grew up, so that when I migrated, she felt the silence deeply. Yet in those days of preparation she did not mention the loss to herself, only kept up a cheerful face as I went to and fro. Like mum, my character Mrs. Framji runs a large household, managing tradesmen, servants, and her children’s education. But it is her giving nature, in the end, that allowed me to find a neat resolution to the quandary I’d set up in my plot.

Mysteries are about the hunt for justice. We read them to for the ‘aha’ moment, the reveal, the uncovering of villains, the moment his mask drops. But in real life, like in Dame Agatha Christy’s mysteries, the villains are right among us, wearing elegant suits or charming smiles. And they often succeed because of our way of thinking--we look away, blame the victim, or chalk it down to the unfairness of life. Mysteries reveal the how and why about those who harm others, and sometimes, our own biases. In doing so, they might just draw back the curtain on our way of thinking and bare the truths we do not want to see.

JULIA: Why is it some of the most fascinating fictional characters are those with the most straitened lives? Reading about how women navigated the roles allowed to them is one of my favorite things about historical fiction. How about you, dear reader? Who are the historical heroines you love? What questions to you have for Nev March? One lucky commenter will get a free copy of Murder in Old Bombay!

You can find out more about Nev and her writing at her website. You can talk books with her at Goodreads, friend her on Facebook, and follow her on Twitter as @nevmarch