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Editorial Content for The Adventure of the Peculiar Protocols: Adapted from the Journals of John H. Watson, M.D.

Contributors

Reviewer (text)

Jesse Kornbluth for HeadButler.com

THE SEVEN-PER-CENT SOLUTION: Being a Reprint from the Reminiscences of John H. Watson, M.D. burst onto the bestseller list in 1974. More “reprints” followed. Then Nicholas Meyer, the “editor” of the “reminiscences,” became a mega-successful screenwriter and director (think: Star Trek), and there were no more Holmes and Watson adventures for 26 years.

At last they’re back, in THE ADVENTURES OF THE PECULIAR PROTOCOLS: Adapted from the Journals of John H. Watson, M.D. It’s 1905 now, and in the new century “crimes are getting bigger” and Holmes is getting older. We see him on the cusp of his 50th birthday, and though he doesn’t feel old, he senses a gloomy retirement ahead: “I’ll rusticate among flora and fauna.”

But at a birthday lunch with the now happily married Watson, his brother appears, with a fresh mystery for Holmes: a document found on the body of a murdered member of the British Secret Service. It refers to a meeting of a group bent on world dominance. Is this threat real?

"It’s a pleasure to spend a few hours again with this dynamic duo."

About the document: the title is “The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion.” You may recognize the title. It is a fake. But a very pervasive one. First published in Russia in 1905 --- Meyer is an accurate historian --- it found an audience in the United States when Henry Ford funded printing of 500,000 copies. The Nazis made potent use of it. When Donald Trump accuses American Jews who vote for Democrats of “great disloyalty,” he is indirectly echoing the Protocols.

Holmes knows how dangerous this document can be. His mission: prove it’s a fake. This will require him to cross a line --- to be both a detective and a spy. And off Holmes and Watson and a mysterious and beautiful translator go. Holmes hasn’t lost a step; he notices “a traveling salesman with a sample case too light to contain any goods.” He offers advice every spy should know: “Never take the first cab.” To read a tasty excerpt, click here.

There are trains. Hotels. Paris. London. A loaded gun. And an ending that took this reader by surprise, even though Meyer gives it away at the beginning. [To buy the book from Amazon, click here. For the Kindle edition, click here. For the audiobook, click here.]

The fact that the Protocols are fake creates a second problem: How do you counter a fake? Very clever, Mr. Meyer --- your smart sleuth deals with one of the biggest issues we face today. And there are nifty historical references. How did Houdini astonish the Tsar by getting a long silent bell to ring? He had a hidden sharpshooter fire on cue. With a Mannlicher. Anyone get the reference? Very clever, yet again.

It’s a pleasure to spend a few hours again with this dynamic duo.

Teaser

January 1905: Sherlock Holmes and Dr. John H. Watson are summoned by Holmes' brother, Mycroft, to undertake a clandestine investigation. An agent of the British Secret Service has been found floating in the Thames, carrying a manuscript smuggled into England at the cost of her life. The pages purport to be the minutes of a meeting of a secret group intent on nothing less than taking over the world. Based on real events, the adventure takes the famed duo --- in the company of a bewitching woman --- aboard the Orient Express from Paris into the heart of Tsarist Russia, where Holmes and Watson attempt to trace the origins of this explosive document. On their heels are desperate men of unknown allegiance, determined to prevent them from achieving their task.

Promo

January 1905: Sherlock Holmes and Dr. John H. Watson are summoned by Holmes' brother, Mycroft, to undertake a clandestine investigation. An agent of the British Secret Service has been found floating in the Thames, carrying a manuscript smuggled into England at the cost of her life. The pages purport to be the minutes of a meeting of a secret group intent on nothing less than taking over the world. Based on real events, the adventure takes the famed duo --- in the company of a bewitching woman --- aboard the Orient Express from Paris into the heart of Tsarist Russia, where Holmes and Watson attempt to trace the origins of this explosive document. On their heels are desperate men of unknown allegiance, determined to prevent them from achieving their task.

About the Book

With the international bestseller THE SEVEN-PER-CENT SOLUTION, Nicholas Meyer brought to light a previously unpublished case of Sherlock Holmes, as recorded by Dr. John H. Watson. Now Meyer returns with a shocking discovery --- an unknown case drawn from a recently unearthed Watson journal --- in THE ADVENTURE OF THE PECULIAR PROTOCOLS.

January 1905: Holmes and Watson are summoned by Holmes' brother, Mycroft, to undertake a clandestine investigation. An agent of the British Secret Service has been found floating in the Thames, carrying a manuscript smuggled into England at the cost of her life. The pages purport to be the minutes of a meeting of a secret group intent on nothing less than taking over the world.

Based on real events, the adventure takes the famed duo --- in the company of a bewitching woman --- aboard the Orient Express from Paris into the heart of Tsarist Russia, where Holmes and Watson attempt to trace the origins of this explosive document. On their heels are desperate men of unknown allegiance, determined to prevent them from achieving their task. And what they uncover is a conspiracy so vast as to challenge Sherlock Holmes as never before.

Audiobook available, read by David Robb