James Lovegrove
is the New York Times best-selling author of The Age of Odin, the third novel in his critically-acclaimed
Pantheon military SF series. He was short-listed for the Arthur C. Clarke Award
in 1998 for his novel Days and for the John W. Campbell Memorial Award in 2004
for his novel Untied Kingdom. He also reviews fiction for the Financial Times. He is the author of Sherlock Holmes: Gods of War and Sherlock Holmes: The Stuff of Nightmares
for Titan Books.
Hercule Poirot is
an annoying prig. Miss Marple is an
interfering old busybody. Father Brown
is a pious moralist. Gideon Fell loves
bamboozling others. Lord Peter Wimsey is
a patronising snob. Inspector Morse is a
boorish alcoholic.
Let’s face it,
the great fictional detectives are a pretty unpleasant lot, aren’t they? They’re the sort of people you’d hardly give
time to in real life, let alone welcome into your house. Even Agatha Christie herself tired of her
most famous creation, the fastidious little Belgian, and grew to dislike him
intensely, once dismissing Poirot as a “detestable,
bombastic, tiresome, ego-centric little creep”.
Sherlock Holmes
isn’t much better, to be honest. He is
arrogant. He is overbearing. He is condescending to those less clever than
him, which is pretty much everyone. He
has the shortest of fuses when it comes to patience, and continually berates
and mocks the only man he can call a friend, Dr Watson.
Why is he still
such a popular literary figure, then?
Why does he inspire such loyalty and devotion in his fans, worldwide? Why are they still making movies and TV shows
about him, nearly a century and a half after Sir Arthur Conan Doyle first
dreamed him up? Why do authors, myself
among them, write Holmes pastiches, and why do readers lap them up? Why is he still the most loved fictional
detective of them all?
My theory, for
what it’s worth, is that Sherlock Holmes is the ideal big brother. As we all know, he himself is a younger
brother, seven years junior to Mycroft; but he fulfils the role of senior
sibling both to Watson and to the reader.
Like a big
brother, he is cool (in every sense). He
is that bit smarter. He leads the
way. He’s the one who gets you into
scrapes, and gets you out again. He’s
fit and strong and tall. You can’t help
but look up to him. You know he’ll look
after you.
All of the
above mentioned detectives are phenomenally intuitive and intelligent. They are all firmly on the side of the
angels.
What distinguishes
Holmes from his peers, however, is the fact that he doesn’t work alone. He is firmly part of a two-man team.
Yes, Poirot has a
sidekick, Captain Hastings. But Hastings
is very much a subordinate. Poirot never
even pretends to treat him as an equal. In
some of the adventures, Hastings doesn’t appear at all.
Miss Marple has a
string of young friends and relatives, mostly nephews and nieces, all of whom
help her along. But mostly she does the
thinking work by herself.
Father Brown,
too, is a loner – although God is his co-pilot.
Gideon Fell has a spouse, which makes him unusual in this context. But Mrs Fell is never given a forename and
barely features in the stories.
As for Wimsey, he
has Bunter, his valet. Bunter helps out
in every aspect of his lordship’s life, from preparing meals to getting him
dressed, and his skills in the field of photography sometimes come into
play. But all said and done, he remains
an inferior, a mere domestic.
Morse, meanwhile,
has Sergeant Lewis, who is a capable policeman in his own right. But Lewis invariably follows Morse’s lead on
a case and endures endless belittling and castigation at the other man’s
hands. Rank divides them.
What sets Holmes
apart, then, is that he has his “little brother”, Watson, whom he looks upon
with exasperated benevolence. The two
share an almost familial bond. The
constant presence of Watson by Holmes’s side humanises him, and dilutes his
less appealing qualities. If someone as
straightforward and decent as John Watson can see the good in Sherlock Holmes,
then so, by extension, can we.
Sherlock Holmes: The
Thinking Engine, Titan Books, £7.99
March 1895.
Hilary Term at Oxford. In the newly built extension to the University
Galleries, Professor Quantock has put the finishing touches to a wondrous computational
device that, he claims, is capable of analytical thought to rival that of the
cleverest men alive. A challenge that
Sherlock Holmes cannot ignore. He and
Watson travel to Oxford, where a battle of wits ensues between the great detective and his mechanical
counterpart as they compete to see which of them can be first to solve a series
of crimes. As man and machine vie for supremacy, it becomes clear that the
Thinking Engine has its own agenda and Holmes’ and Watson’s lives are on the
line as a ghost from the past catches up with them.
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