Six Great Sherlock Holmes Stories (Dover Thrift Editions)
by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle | Literature & Fiction | This book has not been rated.
ISBN: 0486270556 Global Overview for this book
ISBN: 0486270556 Global Overview for this book
2 journalers for this copy...
No comments, da ich das Buch nicht gelesen habe.
WILD RELEASE NOTES:
BAAL
Kreittmayrstr. 26
80335 München
Neuhausen
Öffentlicher Personen Nahverkehr: Stiglmaierplatz: U1, U7, Tram 20, 21: Sandstraße
Viel Spaß beim Lesen!
BAAL
Kreittmayrstr. 26
80335 München
Neuhausen
Öffentlicher Personen Nahverkehr: Stiglmaierplatz: U1, U7, Tram 20, 21: Sandstraße
Viel Spaß beim Lesen!
Taken last Wednesday at the MUC meetup.
Contains the stories:
A Scandal in Bohemia (with the famous Irene Adler, "the woman")
The Red-headed league
The Adventure of the speckled band
The Adventure of the engineer's thumb
The final problem (Sherlock Holmes famous death)
The Adventure of the empty house (Sherlock Holmes even more famous return)
I'll re-read them again before releasing them - Sherlock Holmes is always good.
(Though it's still interesting to read the Annotated version, where they not only explain terms special to those times, like Dark-lanterns, or speculate, based on timetables and phases on the moon, on which date an adventure took place, but also point out why Doyle's lack of knowledge lead to mistakes such as a snake that climbs a rope and listens to a whistle - both impossible for snakes - and try to explain it by concluding that the villain must've bread some cross between a snake and a leguan ;-))
Contains the stories:
A Scandal in Bohemia (with the famous Irene Adler, "the woman")
The Red-headed league
The Adventure of the speckled band
The Adventure of the engineer's thumb
The final problem (Sherlock Holmes famous death)
The Adventure of the empty house (Sherlock Holmes even more famous return)
I'll re-read them again before releasing them - Sherlock Holmes is always good.
(Though it's still interesting to read the Annotated version, where they not only explain terms special to those times, like Dark-lanterns, or speculate, based on timetables and phases on the moon, on which date an adventure took place, but also point out why Doyle's lack of knowledge lead to mistakes such as a snake that climbs a rope and listens to a whistle - both impossible for snakes - and try to explain it by concluding that the villain must've bread some cross between a snake and a leguan ;-))