FAQ

What did Arthur Conan Doyle say about Sherlock Holmes?

What did Arthur Conan Doyle say about Sherlock Holmes?

Sherlock Holmes is the winning child whom everyone loves except his father. “I believe,” Conan Doyle once sadly wrote, “that if I had never touched Holmes, who has tended to obscure my higher work, my position in literature would at the present moment be a more commanding one.”

Why did Sir Arthur Conan Doyle revive Sherlock Holmes?

The Great Detective returned in 1901 only because Conan Doyle wanted to do a story about the legend of a great hound on the moody moors of Dartmoor and felt it easier to use Holmes than to create an entirely new character. Once revived, he lived on through 32 more stories and two more novels.

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Why do readers like Sherlock Holmes?

While Sherlock Holmes is a character from 19th century Victorian England, most of the things readers love about him are qualities that are timeless. Holmes is amazingly intelligent and strong, but he’s also relatable. Sherlock Holmes remains the most popular out of all of the fictional detectives for these reasons.

How did Conan kill off Sherlock Holmes?

He killed off the character by having him, and his nemesis Professor Moriarity, die while going over Reichenbach Falls in Switzerland. Conan Doyle’s own mother, when told of the planned story, begged her son not to finish off Sherlock Holmes.

Who was Sherlock’s greatest enemy?

Sherlock Holmes’s Greatest Enemy Wasn’t Moriarty. “I was glad to withdraw Holmes before the public were too weary of him,” Arthur Conan Doyle wrote to a journalist in 1927, several years before Doyle’s death. It was not, of course, the public that was weary of Holmes, but Doyle himself.

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Does Sherlock Holmes die in the final problem?

In the short story “The Final Problem”, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle made the decision to kill off Sherlock Holmes (although he did bring him back again in the story of “The Empty House”). This was met with great disapproval from the fans, who didn’t want to see their favorite detective dead.

How did Sherlock Holmes get started?

Influenced by a character of Edgar Allan Poe, the French detective M. Dupin, Conan Doyle wished to create his own detective character. The character of Sherlock Holmes first appeared in a story, “A Study in Scarlet,” which Conan Doyle published at the end of 1887 in a magazine, Beeton’s Christmas Annual.