Introduction
The Sherlock Holmes Stories of Edward D. Hoch
Edward D. Hoch
Contents
Introduction by Edward D. Hoch
Prologue: January 22–23, 1890: The Most Dangerous Man September, 1883: The Return of the Speckled Band
Summer, 1885: The Adventure of Vittoria, the Circus Belle
Summer, 1888: The Manor House Case
Christmas Day, 1888: The Christmas Client
June, 1894: The Addleton Tragedy
January, 189?: The Adventure of the Domino Club
September, 1899: The Adventure of the Cipher in the Sand
Christmas Eve, 1899: The Christmas Conspiracy 1902: The Adventure of the Anonymous Author August, 1911: A Scandal in Montreal
April, 1912: The Adventure of the Dying Ship
Edward D. Hoch: An Appreciation by Gary Lovisi
INTRODUCTION
I WAS INTRODUCED TO the novels of Ellery Queen at age nine, and it was only a year later, as I lay sick in bed with chicken pox, that my grandfather presented me with that massive volume, The Complete Sherlock Holmes. I read every story and novel over the next several days, and became a fan for life.
Starting in the late 1980s, a number of original anthologies began to appear, recounting new adventures of the famed sleuth. Some of these dealt with cases mentioned but not recorded by Dr. Watson. Others were open to just about anything the authors could imagine. I was honored to be chosen by several editors to contribute to their volumes. Now I find myself the author of a dozen stories which Gary Lovisi has asked me to collect here. I hope you find as much enjoyment in reading them as I had in writing them.
My special thanks to the editors who first published these stories: Fred Dannay, Marvin Kaye, Marty Greenberg, Mike Ashley, Otto Penzler, Andrew Gulli, George Vanderburgh and Janet Hutchings—a distinguished list indeed.
Edward D. Hoch
Rochester, New York
September 9, 2007
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