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Author Topic: What you thought of Sherlock Holmes and The House of Silk  (Read 8088 times)
TiggsRulz:)
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« Reply #15 on: January 10, 2012, 10:00:28 PM »

I dunno... It was probably just a typo, but we can assume that it was around that kind of age that he started  cheesy
Anyway, Welcome to the board, Sunshine Superman  grin I hope you stay!
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DilanMelis
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« Reply #16 on: January 14, 2012, 06:56:53 AM »

I haven't read this as yet. I actually have the originals sitting on my shelf to be read (for about a year now!) and so have been fastidiously ignoring this, as much as I want to read it. I figure I should read the originals first?
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hydramate
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« Reply #17 on: January 14, 2012, 09:51:54 AM »

I would say yes but only because it would give you a greater understanding of the characters Conan Doyle created and their world, as well as being a set of great stories. It would also enable you to admire how close to Conan Doyle's style The House of Silk was written.

On the other hand, The House of Silk is perfectly readable without the originals and if it's a choice between leaving it all for several years or just reading The House of Silk on it's own, go ahead and read it! =D
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DilanMelis
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« Reply #18 on: January 17, 2012, 08:32:41 PM »

Ahh okies Cheesy I'll set myself a limit. If I don't read the originals within the next few months, I'll go ahead and read House of Silk.
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DD3
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« Reply #19 on: February 03, 2012, 11:00:43 PM »

i think it was well written. on the other hand i would have liked it more if there was more 'cleverness' and less 'darkness'.
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Curlyj50
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« Reply #20 on: February 15, 2012, 02:30:52 AM »

I enjoyed the book, I think you captured the style of Conan Doyle very well, except I don't believe Conan Doyle would have thought at all about the depravity fallen upon the boys. The times were different and it was ignored. I think you gave away the main clue too early, but it didn't ruin my enjoyment of the book, there were no surprises. On a side note I was watching an Old sherlock holmes movie and Ian fleming had a part in the movie, I thought that was cool, and thought you might like to know since you enjoyed the Bond series. Also I really enjoyed your visit to Keplers in Northern CA.
Thanks
John
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tcobb1959
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« Reply #21 on: April 03, 2012, 05:05:15 PM »

I loved the House of Silk.  Without giving too much away I felt like I was reading Doyle himself.   This was definitely an adult book with the subject matter.  I did end up guessing there was more to the characters than what they appeared to be.  Excellent story.  I didn't want the book to end.  I do hope AH writes another but when does the man sleep?  I was so glad to read in his Christmas post that Foyle's War may be coming back in 2013.
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lisy
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« Reply #22 on: April 06, 2012, 06:30:23 PM »

hi I am new to the site and new to Anthony Horowitz as an author, a situation I intent to remedy.......I grew up reading Sherlock Holmes and have to say that Mr. Horowitz did a splendid job on recreating the characters and the setting of Victorian England in all of its splendor and all of the worst parts of London...I loved the cover for that is what originaly drew me to the book and after perusing the jacket knew I had to have this book...it did not take me long to finish it and that was the hard part...Dare I hope that the ending was just a teaser to the sequel?  I so hope so...thank you for the hours of enjoyment.....Blessed Be
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CheddarTrek
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« Reply #23 on: July 12, 2012, 05:20:54 AM »

Hey there.  I read "House of Silk" a week or two ago and quite liked it.  The writing was excellent and it seemed to do a good job of getting the *feel* of Holmes right while upgrading it a bit to fit in with more recent literature.

I enjoyed the book.

But one thing sort of bugged me, and that was Moriarty.  I might have missed something, I admit that, but if so I was hoping someone could tell me.

...What was the point of the scene with Moriarty and Watson?

Or I guess I should say what was the point of it within the context of the story?  I understand that there was a desire to have a cameo from Moriarty, and I'm all for that.  But that seems to be about all it amounted to.

Moriarty gave Watson a key to the cell and some information.  The key was never used and Holmes didn't seem to have a vital need for any of the information.  Now that would be fine if that stuff had come from anyone but Moriarty -- because if there is anyone who should know what Holmes is capable of doing it's him.  He should have known/expected that Holmes would be able to make his own escape, or barring that he'd have known that getting the key to Holmes likely wasn't going to do much good (according to Watson's observations anyway).  Holmes also didn't need any of the information, which is again something that Moriarty might have expected.

I read the rest of the book after that expecting for that key to come into play somewhere.  When they went to the freak show I thought "ah ha!  It wasn't a key to the cell, it was a key for something here!" and then I thought again that it might be a key to something in the House of Silk... but in the end it really was a key to the cell that ended up being useless... wasn't it?  That just doesn't seem like a fitting contribution from Moriarty.

So did I miss something?  Or would the plotlines have been almost the exact same had Moriarty been cut from the book?  Seems like all he did was make a cameo.  The warning of white silk at the beginning could also have been cut, even though I liked it, as it didn't seem to tell Holmes much of anything (except to make him realize in hindsight that he should have paid attention to it).

So yeah -- an awesome story.  I liked it a lot and I intend to look up some other books by the author (this was the first novel by Horowitz that I'd read, and I was impressed).  But this was just bugging me a bit and I hoped someone might point out something I missed.

Or not, but whatever works.  Smiley

Cheers folks!
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AlexRiderFan2012
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« Reply #24 on: July 12, 2012, 09:12:31 PM »

I still think the Alex Rider books are way better! I just cant seem to make a profile page on here why? How do i do that?  sad
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Pedro-ologist
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« Reply #25 on: July 14, 2012, 02:52:00 AM »

You need to have made 15 posts before you can access your profile and create new topics  grin
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CheddarTrek
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« Reply #26 on: July 16, 2012, 06:25:56 AM »

So does anyone have a reply or a conversation point as regards to my previous post?  Do people agree/disagree?  And so on.  Smiley

Nice to meet you all -- glad there was a response or two at least!  Maybe I'll check out the Alex Rider books soon.
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TiggsRulz:)
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« Reply #27 on: July 16, 2012, 08:21:00 AM »

So does anyone have a reply or a conversation point as regards to my previous post?  Do people agree/disagree?  And so on.  Smiley

Nice to meet you all -- glad there was a response or two at least!  Maybe I'll check out the Alex Rider books soon.

To be honest, I'll have to read the book again if I'm going to make a constructive comment on what you've said... It has been a while  cheesy
But I will get back to you on this one  wink

And yes, you should try the Alex Rider, Power of Five and Diamond Brothers books - quite different from the holmes book, but very good works all the same.
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Pedro-ologist
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« Reply #28 on: July 16, 2012, 08:56:53 AM »

Cheddartrek:

I agree with basically everything you said. When you think about it, one could totally remove that scene from the book, and it would be no different really. However, it does help the reader to work out what the House of Silk is. If even the worst criminals think is lowly - then it must be bad. Also, it warns Watson to head to the prison - which lets us see the daring escape  grin . But - you are correct, it was probably unnecessary, however, I read the book for pleasure and therefore had far less analytical intentions while reading it. So it did not "bug" me.
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nickstraker
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« Reply #29 on: September 06, 2012, 01:30:13 PM »

Fantastic read and thoroughly true to and as good as the originals. However, just a small point, Watson observes that Holmes' eyes are dilated after opiate intoxication when the opposite (tiny pinprick pupils) would have been the case.
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