- A Sherlock Holmes short story
- Genre: mystery, crime, detective, British Lit
- Published: 1903
- My edition: The Annotated Sherlock Holmes, Volume II
- Annotated by: William S. Baring-Gould
- Setting: London, England; 1894
When I last read of Sherlock Holmes, he was, well…Dead!
In "The Final Problem", Sherlock Holmes and Professor Moriarty engage in mortal, hand-to-hand combat, at Reichenbach Falls in Switzerland, and both fall to their death.
Which accounts for Dr. Watson’s shock at the appearance of Sherlock Holmes in his study some three years later.
I moved my head to look at the cabinet behind me. When I turned again Sherlock Holmes [in disguise moments before] was standing smiling at me across my study table. I rose to my feet, stared at him for some seconds in utter amazement, and then it appears that I must have fainted for the first and the last time in my life.
Classic Holmes’ panache and Watson’s devoted loyalty.
The period when all the world believed Sherlock Holmes to be dead, is now known as “The Great Hiatus.” It was genuinely Doyle’s intent to leave Holmes dead and end the series, but the public outcry and rage caused the author to resurrect the great detective in stunning fashion.
Which brings my reading journey to “The Adventure of the Empty House”. This story, serves two purposes: to explain how Holmes survived (and what he’s been doing for three years); and solving the case at hand, a seemingly unrelated but baffling murder. It turns out, the murderer is also a former colleague of Professor Moriarty’s who is intent on revenge against Holmes. So, a third purpose: preventing Holmes' murder.
There isn’t a lot of sleuthing or deductive logic in this case. It’s really just baiting a trap and a suspenseful stake-out. A very exciting ending just the same. It is an epic moment in the Sherlock Holmes canon, which begins an entire new series of adventures and reunites the beloved duo of Holmes and Watson.
I can almost hear the cheers in the streets of England, when the story appeared in The Strand magazine.
"The Adventure of the Empty House” is part of Return of Sherlock Holmes collection, though I read it from The Annotated Sherlock Holmes: a two-volume collection of all 60 cases (four novels and 56 short stories), which attempts to put all of Holmes’ cases into fictional chronological order. According to this chronology, “The Adventure of the Empty House” is Sherlock Holmes 32nd case.
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