Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A Study in Scarlet Women is a mystery by Sherry Thomas. It is the first novel of Thomas' "Lady Sherlock series". [1] In the novel, Thomas gender-flips Sherlock Holmes into Charlotte Holmes. [2] Thomas said "A Sherlock Holmes has the luxury of not thinking about such rules.
Thomas is an undisputed master of historical romance and if you love her style, check out her Charlotte Holmes novels, a wonderful series of gender-swapped Sherlock Holmes mysteries. $6.99 at ...
Charlotte Holmes attributes her detective activities to a mythical brother "Sherlock" in a historical mystery romance series by Sherry Thomas beginning with A Study in Scarlet Women, 2016. Enola Holmes is the 14-year-old sister of Sherlock and Mycroft Holmes and has run away from boarding school to make a living as a finder of missing persons ...
Sherry M. Thomas (born 1975) is an American novelist of young adult fantasy, historical romance, and contemporary romance. She has won multiple awards including the Romance Writers of America RITA Award for Best Historical Romance for Not Quite a Husband in 2010 and His at Night in 2011.
The story was more closely adapted in the season 4 episode, "A Study in Charlotte". "The First Adventure", the first episode of the 2014 NHK puppetry series Sherlock Holmes, is loosely based on A Study in Scarlet and "The Adventure of the Six Napoleons". In it, Holmes, Watson and Lestrade are pupils at a fictional boarding school called Beeton ...
Paul Kane: Sherlock Holmes and the Servants of Hell (2016), set Clive Barker's Hellraiser universe. Stephen King: "The Doctor's Case" (1987), in which Watson solves a case before Holmes. John R. King: The Shadow of Reichenbach Falls (2008) Laurie R. King: The Mary Russell series of novels set in Holmes' later life (ongoing as of February 2024).
Faye's debut novel, Dust and Shadow: An Account of the Ripper Killings by Dr. John H. Watson, was published in 2009. Caleb Carr said of this book: "At long last, an author of rare talent combines a thorough, enthusiastic knowledge of the Sherlock Holmes canon with truly rigorous research into, and respect for, what remains one of the greatest and most horrifying unsolved murder cases in modern ...
In Sarah MacLean's review for The New York Times, she says, "The Chinese-born Thomas is known for a lush style that demonstrates her love of her second language, and this novel edges into historical fiction with its transporting prose even as it delivers on heat and emotion and a well-earned happily ever after."