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  1. Sherlock Holmes pastiches. Sherlock Holmes has long been a popular character for pastiche, Holmes-related work by authors and creators other than Arthur Conan Doyle . Their works can be grouped into four broad categories: New Sherlock Holmes stories. Stories in which Holmes appears in a cameo role.

    • Robert Lee Hall
    • 1977
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  3. Jan 17, 2022 · Pastiche and Sherlock Holmes are words that have almost become welded together. This is no marvel, since the number of pastiches far outstrips the 56 stories in the original canon. Goodreads lists 423 books in its “best Sherlock Holmes pastiches”; it’s anybody’s guess how many didn’t make that arbitrary cut.

  4. Here are 8 Sherlock Holmes pastiches where Holmes goes about solving government conspiracies, tracks Jack The Ripper and makes a deal with Saint Peter.

    • Are all Sherlock Holmes stories pastiches?1
    • Are all Sherlock Holmes stories pastiches?2
    • Are all Sherlock Holmes stories pastiches?3
    • Dust and Shadow: An Account of the Ripper Killings by Dr. John H. Watson by Lyndsay Faye (Goodreads Author)
    • The House of Silk (Horowitz's Holmes, #1) by Anthony Horowitz (Goodreads Author)
    • The Beekeeper's Apprentice (Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes, #1) by Laurie R. King (Goodreads Author)
    • The Seven-Per-Cent Solution (Nicholas Meyer Holmes Pastiches #1) by Nicholas Meyer (Goodreads Author)
    • The Seven Per Cent Solution by Nicholas Meyer. This novel tops my list for a couple of reasons; most importantly, it was the first I ever encountered. Meyer writes of a troubled and struggling Holmes, a man whose addiction terrifies his friend Watson and has led him into dark delusions—ones which can only be addressed by another Victorian luminary, Sigmund Freud.
    • “The Case of Death and Honey” by Neil Gaiman. Some of the most marvellous pastiches are, ironically, those that take us furthest away from the classic Holmes canon, and this Edgar Award-nominated short story by one of the finest postmodern writers of the age is no exception.
    • A Sherlockian Quartet by Rick Boyer. It’s very difficult to find pastiches that replicate the Watsonian voice accurately. Mr, Boyer does, in an uncannily channelled four adventures that ring true even when Giant Rats are involved, and the chains of reasoning he pens for Holmes are impeccable.
    • “The Doctor’s Case” by Stephen King. Humor is sadly lacking in many Sherlock Holmes pastiches; the fact that this is one of the most often reproduced in anthologies goes to show that King avoids this error.
  5. The characters of the Sherlock Holmes stories stay in the imaginations of fans worldwide, and have found life beyond the Canon in pastiches, parodies, and fan fictions. A pastiche is similar to a parody in that it mimics the style and content of the original work, but pastiches do not necessarily find humor in those similarities.

  6. Nicholas Meyer's The Seven-Per-Cent Solution is considered a classic of Sherlock Holmes pastiches, and I found it also to be very well written. Certainly see why it's considered a classic. He has a couple more pastiches, but I haven't read them yet.

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