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The writings attributed to Dr. Watson's contemporary, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, are referred to as the Apocrypha. They resemble the Sacred Writings but not so closely that they are likely to become part of the Canon. Among the items included in the Apocrypha are two plays: The Speckled Band, based on Dr. Watson's adventure by the same name; and The Crown Diamond, which was later turned into "The Adventure of the Mazarin Stone," a story that has been attributed to the Literary Agent. Performances of these are listed in Part X, Section K. In addition, Conan Doyle wrote two short parodies, "The Field Bazaar" and "How Watson Learned the Trick," which take the form of the familiar breakfast-table scene. Holmes is also believed to figure prominently in two other stories: "The Man with the Watches" and "The Lost Special." Other writings by Conan Doyle that are considered part of the Apocrypha are listed in Part V. Critical articles about the Apocrypha are listed in Part VI under that heading. Like the Canonical tales, each book or magazine and newspaper containing one or more apocryphal story or play is listed separately.
C2247. "The Crown Diamond: An Evening with Sherlock Holmes: A Play in One Act." New York: The Baskerrette Press, 1958. [32] p. With a foreword and three illustrations by E.W.S. (Edgar W. Smith). Limited to 59 numbered and signed copies; additional unnumbered copies were also issued. Three-quarter pink paper over boards with black cloth spine, white paper label on upper cover lettered black. "An unbelievably corny play printed for the first time because of a decent respect for the opinions of mankind--and especially that segment of mankind distinguished as The Baker Street Irregulars--demands that censorship unaccountably imposed upon it for more than thirty-seven years be arbitrarily rescinded." (Edgar W. Smith) First American edition; published July 1958.
Translation of above.
C2249. "The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes: `The Field Bazaar'," The Student, Edinburgh University Magazine, (NS), 11, Bazaar Number (November 20, 1896), 35-36. First appearance.
C2250. The Field Bazaar. London: The Athenaeum Press, 1934. [2] p. Privately printed by A.G. Macdonell, and limited to 100 copies. First English edition.
C2251. "The Field Bazaar," 221b: Studies in Sherlock Holmes, by Various Hands. Edited by Vincent Starrett. New York: The Macmillan Co., 1940. p. 1-4. -----, ----. Morristown, N.J.: The Baker Street Irregulars, 1956. p. 1-4 (BSI Incunabula, No. 4) Facsimile and limited edition of 350 copies. -----, -----. New York: Biblo and Tannen, 1969. p. 1-4.
C2252. The Field Bazaar: A Sherlock Holmes Pastiche. Summit, N.J.: The Pamphlet House, 1947. 15 p. Dedicated to The Baker Street Irregulars, and with an introduction by Edgar W. Smith. Limited to 250 numbered copies. Green textured cloth with white paper label on upper cover lettered black. First American edition; published July 1947.
C2253. "The Field Bazaar," The Daily Californian Weekly Magazine, 4, No. 9 (January 14, 1969), 11.
C2254. "The Field Bazaar," The Edinburgh Stories, of Arthur Conan Doyle. [Introduction by Owen Dudley Edwards.] [Edinburgh]: Polygon Books, [Edinburgh University Student Publications Board, 1981]. p. 9-11. Jacket illustration of Holmes by James Hutcheson.
C2255. The Hound of the Baskervilles. Mrs. Marshall's Type Writing Office, 126 Strand, August 1902. 40 p. Characters: Sir Henry Baskerville, Sherlock Holmes, Dr. Watson, James Stapleton, Barrymore (Butler to Sir Henry), Tom Cartwright (Messenger Boy), Cabman 2704, Waiter (at Northumberland Hotel), Inspector Lestrade (Detective from Scotland Yard), Beryl Stapleton, Mrs. Barrymore. An unsigned typed playscript, in three acts, with a number of handwritten changes or corrections in ink, whose authorship has been attributed to Doyle by Bliss Austin. Apparently the final act (Act IV) was never completed.
C2256. "How Watson Learned the Trick," The Book of the Queen's Dolls' House Library. Edited by E.V. Lucas. With twenty-four plates of which eight are in colour. London: Methuen & Co. Ltd., [June] 1924. p. 92-94, plate VII. Vol. 2 of a two-volume set titled The Book of the Queen's Dolls' House, in a slipcase. Limited to 1,500 copies. First English edition.
C2257. "How Watson Learned the Trick," The New York Times (August 24, 1924), III, 3.
C2258. "How Watson Learned the Trick," Chicago: Camden House, 1947. 8 p. White card, folded and stapled. With a bibliographical note by Vincent Starrett. Limited to 60 copies. First separate edition; published September 1947.
C2259. "How Watson Learned the Trick," BSJ, 1, No. 2 (April 1951), 63-65.
C2260. "How Watson Learned the Trick," The Daily Californian Weekly Magazine, 4, No. 9 (January 14, 1969), 11.
C2261. How Watson Learned the Trick. [Preface by Philip Weller.] [Fareham, Hampshire]: Sherlock Publications, Xmas 1993. [8] p. (The Franco-Midland Hardware Company Singular Texts Series) "This publication was produced originally as a Xmas gift for the members of The Franco-Midland Hardware Company, the world's leading Sherlock Holmes correspondence study group."
C2262. "The Story of the Lost Special," [Illustrations by Max Cowper]. The Strand Magazine, 16, No. 92 (August 1898), 153-162. (Round the Fire, 3) First appearance.
C2263. "The Story of the Lost Special," [Illustrations by Max Cowper]. The Strand Magazine [New York], 16 (September 1898), 153-162.
C2264. "The Lost Special," Rolling Wheels. Editor-in-chief, Herbert S. Zim. Editor, George S. Amsbary. Chicago: Spencer Press, [1959]. p. 319-333. illus. (Fact and Fiction, Vol. 2)
C2265. "The Lost Special," The Crime-Solvers: 13 Classic Detective Stories. Edited by Stewart H. Benedict. [New York: Dell Pub. Co., February 1966.] p. 84-103. (Laurel-Leaf Library, No. 3078) Cover illustration by Dean Ellis. 2nd printing September 1967; 3rd printing November 1969; 4th printing May 1972; 5th printing October 1972; 6th printing December 1973; 7th printing September 1974; 8th printing August 1975; 9th printing October 1976; 10th printing May 1978.
C2266. "The Lost Special," Edgar Wallace Mystery Magazine, 3, No. 27 (October 1966), 84-100. "Continuing our series of outstanding (but less well known) crime stories by famous 20th century authors, this was one of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's (1859-1930) personal favourites. It also contains a fascinating, oblique fragment of unsigned ratiocination by Sherlock Holmes."
C2267. "The Lost Special," When the World Screamed and Other Stories, [by] Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. London: John Murray, [1968]. Chap. 2, p. 41-61. "A John Murray Paperback."
C2268. "The Lost Special," Classic Crime Stories: The Criminal in Literature, by Arthur Liebman. New York: Richard Rosen Press, [1975]. p. 105-122. (Masterworks of Mysteries Series) -----, -----. Teacher's Manual. New York: Richards Rosen Press, [1976]. p. 14-17.
C2269. "The Lost Special," Mysterious Railway Stories. Compiled and edited by William Patrick. London: W.H. Allen, 1984. p. 65-84. Jacket Illustration by Bruce Pennington.
C2270. "The Mystery of the Lost Special," Death Locked In: An Anthology of Locked Room Stories. Edited by Douglas G. Greene and Robert C.S. Adey. New York: International Polygonics, [October 1987]. p. 427-445.
C2271. "The Story of the Man with the Watches," [Illustrations by Frank Craig]. The Strand Magazine, 16, No. 91 (July 1898), 33-43. (Round the Fire, 2) First appearance.
C2272. "The Story of the Man with the Watches," The Strand Magazine [New York], 16, No. 91 (August 1898), 33-43.
C2273. "The Man with the Watches," MacKill's Mystery Magazine, 3, No. 6 (April 1954), 109-122.
C2274. "The Man with the Watches," Tales for a Winter's Night, [by] Arthur Conan Doyle. Chicago: Academy Chicago, [1989]. p. 9-32. Cover design by Albert Richardson.
The Man with the Watches C2275. The Black Doctor and Other Tales of Terror and Mystery. New York: George H. Doran Co., [n.d., 1925]. v, 279 p. Dark red cloth lettered gilt on spine. Partial contents: Lost. - ManW. First American edition; published Autumn 1925.
C2276. The Black Doctor and Other Tales of Terror and Mystery. New York: George H. Doran Co., [n.d.]. v, 279 p. Orange cloth lettered dark green. Orange jacket lettered dark green. First American edition, 2nd impression.
C2277. The Black Doctor and Other Tales of Terror and Mystery. De Luxe Edition Garden City, N.Y.: Garden City Pub. Co., [1937]. 279 p. (The Works of A. Conan Doyle) Light tan cloth lettered tan against red background on spine; top edge tinted; fore-edge uncut. Volume also listed in a set.
C2278. The Conan Doyle Stories. London: John Murray, [June 1929]. xiii, 1201 p. Preface by Arthur Conan Doyle, April 26, 1929. Red cloth lettered gilt. Partial contents: Lost. - ManW. First one-volume English edition; published June 26, 1929. Reprinted September 1929, October 1939, December 1940, December 1945, March 1949, August 1951, November 1956, August 1960, September 1966.
C2279. The Conan Doyle Stories. [London]: Gallery Press [W.H. Smith and Son Ltd., n.d., 1984]. xiii, 1201 p. Reprint of John Murray edition.
C2280. The Conan Doyle Stories. [Leicester]: Gallery Press, [1988]. xiii, 1201 p.
C2281. Letters from Baker Street. Edited and examined for the Canon by Edgar W. Smith. New York: The Pamphlet House, 1942. 60 p. "A communication appearing in the London Times of July 3, 1890, from an amateur reasoner of some celebrity; and a communication appearing in the Daily Gazette in March or April 1892, over the signature of a well-known criminal investigator. Together with the stories in which these letters are quoted: The Lost Special and The Man with the Watches by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Illuminated by a noteworthy communication from Stanley Hopkins, O.B.E., Chief Inspector C.I.D. (Retired), and written and received through the good offices of Christopher Morley and further illuminated by a communication from the eminent Holmesian scholar Vincent Starrett." (Subtitle) Limited to 400 numbered copies, of which the first 200 are in a de luxe binding.
C2282. The Original Illustrated Arthur Conan Doyle. [Secaucus, N.J.]: Castle Books, [1980]. vi, 490 p. illus. "Suspenseful tales by the author of Sherlock Holmes, with all 236 illustrations from The Strand Magazine." (Jacket) Printed in double columns. Partial contents: Introduction, by Robert O. Patterson. - A Day with Dr. Conan Doyle, by Harry How. - ManW. - Lost. Reprinted with credit "compiled by Frank Oppel" on v.t.p.
C2283. Round the Fire Stories. With a frontispiece by A. Castaigne. London: Smith, Elder & Co., 1908. 372, [4] p. ads. Dark red cloth lettered gilt; pictorial design after A. Forestier of the examination of the leather funnel. First English edition; published September 24, 1908.
C2284. Round the Fire Stories. With a frontispiece by A. Castaigne. London: George Bell & Sons, 1908. 372, [4] p. ads. (Bell's Indian and Colonial Library, No. 828) Green paper covers lettered dark green. Also issued in cloth. Partial contents: ManW. - Lost. First English edition - Colonial issue; published September 24, 1908.
C2285. Round the Fire Stories. With a frontispiece by A. Castaigne. Toronto: Copp, Clark Co., [n.d., 1908?]. 372 p. Red cloth lettered gilt. First Canadian edition.
C2286. Round the Fire Stories. New York: The McClure Co., 1908. 356 p. Frontispiece by A. Castaigne. Red ribbed cloth lettered gilt; upper cover: pictorial design of a fireplace in frame beneath mantelpiece. First American edition; published October 17, 1908.
C2287. Round the Fire Stories. Copyright Edition. Leipzig: Bernhard Tauchnitz, 1908. 350 p. (Tauchnitz Edition, Collection of British Authors, Vol. 4077) (A. Conan Doyle, No. 36) Red cloth lettered black on spine. First Continental edition; published October 1908.
C2288. Round the Fire Stories. New York: Doubleday, Page & Co., 1909. 356 p. Red cloth lettered gilt on spine. Reprinted 1910.
C2289. Round the Fire Stories. London: John Murray, [1926]. 372 p.
C2290. Round the Fire Stories. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, Doran & Co., 1930. 380 p. (The Crowborough Edition, Vol. 22) Also listed in a set.
C2291. Round the Fire Mysteries. [London: Greenhill Books, 1985.] 207 p. (Vintage Crime Classics) Jacket design by Lynda Turney.
C2292. The Sherlockian Doyle: Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's The Man with the Watches and The Lost Special. With a special introduction by Lord Donegall, B.S.I.; original illustrations by Roy Hunt. [Culver City, Calif.: Luther Norris, October 1968.] 46 p. Inside cover maps of The Apocrypha (Plate 13) from The Sherlockian Atlas, by Julian Wolff. Privately printed in a limited edition of 500 copies for The Three Students Plus.
C2293. Tales of Terror and Mystery, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. London: John Murray, [1922]. 190 p. (Murray's Fiction Library) Light blue paper over boards; spine lettered gilt. Partial contents: Lost. - ManW. First English edition; published July 12, 1922.
C2294. Tales of Terror and Mystery, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. London: John Murray, [1963]. 190 p. Cover design by Charles Gorham.
C2295.Tales of Terror and Mystery, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Introduction by Nina Conan Doyle Harwood. Illustrated by Barabara Ninde Byfield. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday & Co., 1977. 224 p. Jacket by Al Nagy.
C2296. Tales of Terror and Mystery, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. London and Sydney: Pan Books, [1978]. 218 p. Cover painting by Alan Lee.
A Plot For A Sherlock Holmes Story C2297. "A Plot for a Sherlock Holmes Story," Conan Doyle: His Life and Art, by Hesketh Pearson. London: Methuen & Co., [1943]. p. 93-95. A short scenario for an uncompleted tale of Watson's that Pearson discovered among Doyle's papers.
C2298. "A Plot for a Sherlock Holmes Story," Conan Doyle: His Life and Art, by Hesketh Pearson. London: Published for the British Publishers Guild by Methuen and Co., [1946]. p. 105-107.
C2299. "A Plot for a Sherlock Holmes Story," Conan Doyle: His Life and Art, by Hesketh Pearson. New York: Walker & Co., [1961]. p. 131-133.
C2300. "A Plot for a Sherlock Holmes Story," A Baker Street Four-Wheeler. Edited by Edgar W. Smith. [Maplewood, N.J., and New York: The Pamphlet House, 1944.] p. 14-15.
C2301. The Speckled Band: An Adventure of Sherlock Holmes. New York; London: Samuel French, c.1912. 124, [2] p. ads. On cover: The Dramatic Works of Arthur Conan Doyle. Publisher's ads on p. [125-126] for the plays of Alfred Sutro, etc. Light green paper covers lettered black; publisher's ads on inside covers. First English edition; published August 1912. 2nd impression, thinner paper with dark green paper covers.
C2302. The Speckled Band: An Adventure of Sherlock Holmes. London; New York: Samuel French, c.1912 [1923]. 124, [2] p. ads. (French's Acting Edition, No. 2558) Publisher's ads on p. [125-126] for Sherlock Holmes and the plays of Gertrude E. Jennings. Light brown paper covers lettered black; publisher's ad on cover for seven plays, the first being The Rising Generation; publisher's ads also on inside covers. First English edition, 3rd impression 1923.
C2303. The Speckled Band: An Adventure of Sherlock Holmes. London; New York: Samuel French, [n.d., 1929, c. 1912]. 124, [2] p. ads. (French's Acting Edition, No. 2558) Publisher's ad on p. [126] for A Book of Make-Up. Light brown paper covers lettered black; publisher's ad on cover for five plays, the first being Secrets. First English edition, 4th impression 1929.
C2304. "The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes: The Speckled Band," The World's Library of Best Books: Selected Passages from the World's Famous Books with Helpful Explanations. [London: George Newnes Ltd., n.d.]. Vol. 2, pt. 12, p. 413-429. Illustrated with scenes from the play, produced at the Adelphi Theatre.
C2305. "The Stonor Case," The Uncollected Sherlock Holmes. Compiled by Richard Lancelyn Green. [Harmondsworth, Middlesex]: Penguin Books, [1983]. p. 165-246. The first version of the drama based on Spec. The editor notes the many minor differences between this version and the Acting Edition.
C2306. The Final Adventures of Sherlock Holmes: Completing the Canon, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Collected and introduced by Peter Haining. [Secaucus, N.J.]: Castle Books, [January 1981]. 208 p. Contents: Introduction by Peter Haining. - The Truth About Sherlock Holmes. - The Mystery of Uncle Jeremy's Household. - The Field Bazaar. - The Story of the Man with the Watches. - The Story of the Lost Special. - The Adventure of the Tall Man. - The Painful Predicament of Sherlock Holmes. - The Case of the Man Who Was Wanted. - Some Personalia About Sherlock Holmes. - The Case of the Inferior Sleuth. - The Crown Diamond. - How Watson Learned the Trick. - Appendix. A Gaudy Death. - The Mystery of Sasassa Valley. - My Favourite Sherlock Holmes Adventures. Jacket illustration by Frank Wiles. Reprinted September 1982. Reviews: Afghanistanzas, 5, No. 5 (June 1981), 9-10 (John F. Wyman); 5, No. 7 (September 1981), 2-6 (John F. Wyman); BSJ, 31, No. 2 (June 1981), 126 (Thomas L. Stix, Jr.); BSM, No. 26 (Summer 1981), 35-36 (Jon L. Lellenberg); Daily Mail, (January 15, 1981) (Philip Parrish); Evening Gazette [Colchester] (January 16, 1981) (David Woods); Punch, 280 (January 21, 1981), 123 (David Williams); Q£$, 3, No. 1 (February 1982), 5-7 (Alan S. Mosier); SHJ, 15, No. 2 (Summer 1981), 57-58 (Nicholas Utechin); Sherlockiana, 26, Nr. 2/3 (1981), 14; Telegraph and Argus Bradford (January 16, 1981); Western Daily Press [Bristol] (January 16, 1981).
C2307. The Final Adventures of Sherlock Holmes: Completing the Canon, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Collected and introduced by Peter Haining. London: W.H. Allen, 1981. 208 p. Jacket illustration by Frank Wiles.
C2308. The Final Adventures of Sherlock Holmes: Completing the Canon, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Collected and introduced by Peter Haining. [London]: W.H. Allen, [1981]. 208 p. "A Star Book." Cover illustration by Frank Wiles.
C2309. The Final Adventures of Sherlock Holmes: Completing the Canon, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Collected and introduced by Peter Haining. [London: W.H. Allen & Co., 1986.] 318 p. "A Crescent Book." Large print edition.
C2310. Masterworks of Crime & Mystery, [by] Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Edited by Jack Tracy. New York: The Dial Press, [1982]. ix, 315 p. Contents: Introduction. - The Mystery of Sasassa Valley. - Bones. - Selecting a Ghost. - The Recollections of Captain Wilkie. - The Parson of Jackman's Gulch. - Uncle Jeremy's Household. - The Bravoes of Market-Drayton. - Our Midnight Visitor. - De Profundis. - Lot No. 249. - The Los Amigos Fiasco. - The Case of Lady Sannox. - The Parasite. - The Winning Shot. - The Brazilian Cat. A fascinating collection of stories that should be of interest to all Sherlockians. A few could be considered apocryphal. Reviews: BSM, No. 32 (Winter 1982), 35-36 (Edward Lauterbach); Mike Shayne Mystery Magazine, 47 (April 1983), 126 (John Ball); Sunday Star [Toronto] (September 4, 1983), G6 (Michael Hanlon), and reprinted in CBook, 7 Nos. 1-2 (March-June 1984), 632.
C2311. Sherlock Holmes: The Published Apocrypha, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and Associated Hands. Selected and edited by Jack Tracy. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1980. x, 325 p. Contents: Introduction. - The Parodies. The Field Bazaar. - How Watson Learned the Trick. - The Adventure of the Two Collaborators, by J.M. Barrie. - The Stories of Mystery. The Man with the Watches. - The Lost Special. - William Gillette as Sherlock Holmes. Sherlock Holmes: A Drama in Four Acts, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and William Gillette. - The Painful Predicament of Sherlock Holmes: A Fantasy in About One-Tenth of an Act, by William Gillette. - Conan Doyle as Dramatist. The Speckled Band: An Adventure of Sherlock Holmes. - The Crown Diamond: An Evening with Sherlock Holmes. - An Outline. Plot for Sherlock Holmes Story. - The Discovery. The Case of the Man Who Was Wanted, by Arthur Whitaker. Like Tracy's The Encyclopaedia Sherlockiana, this is a must book for all Holmes collections. Each of the six sections is preceded by an informative introduction. Reviews: Afghanistanzas, 5, No. 5 (June 1981), 7-9 (Doug Highsmith); 5, No. 7 (September 1981), 2-6 (John F. Wyman); The Armchair Detective, 14 (Winter 1981), 56 (Howard Lachtman); BSJ, 31, No. 2 (June 1981), 126 (Thomas L. Stix, Jr.); BSM, No. 23 (Fall 1980), 31-32 (Jon L. Lellenberg); Booklist, 77 (November 1, 1980), 387 (Connie Fletcher); CH, 4, No. 3 (Spring 1981), 6; CHJ, 3, No. 1 (January 1981), 4 (Newton M. Williams); Chicago Sun-Times (September 21, 1980) (Connie Fletcher), and reprinted in San Francisco Examiner (October 15, 1980), E7; Chronicle-Telegram [Elyria, Ohio] (September 5, 1980), 10 (Bob Penick); Daily Sentinel/Sunday Magazine [Grand Junction, Colo.] (November [?] 1980) (Sheri Poe Bernard); Dallas Morning News (September 21, 1980), 5G ("Hamish Sigerson"); Dawn [Mission Viejo, Calif.] (January 1981), 18 (Cheryl Walker); DCC, 16, No. 4 (July 1980), 3-4 (Glenn J. Shea), and reprinted in Gaslight Publications, Catalogue No. 1 (Winter-Spring 1981), 15; FA, 3, No. 4 (Autumn 1980), 4 (David K. Maxfield); Grand Rapids Press (October 12, 1980) (Joseph H. Dugas); Hartford Courant (December 14, 1980), G-10 (George W. Earley), and reprinted in CBook, 4, No. 4 (December 1981), 399; Houston Chronicle (September 21, 1980) (Joan Lowery Nixon); Indianapolis Star (January 18, 1981) (Farroll A. Speake); Kansas City Star (October 17, 1980) (James McKinley); Los Angeles Times (August 24, 1980) (Joe Saltzman); (December 16, 1980), V, 18 (Howard Lachtman); Miami Herald (January 4, 1981); MM, Nos. 24-25 (April-June 1981), 18-19 (Melody Whitney); Mystery, 2 (March 1981), 40 ("Horace Harker"), and reprinted in BSR, 5, Nos. 13-14 (October-November 1981), 3; The Mystery Fancier, 4 (September-October 1980), 3-5 (E.F. Bleiler); ND, (July 1982), 8 (Abby Mendelson); NS, No. 7 (March 31, 1981), 16 (Thomas Dandrew); New York Times Book Review (November 9, 1980), 26 (Newgate Callendar); PP, 3, No. 4 (1981), 18-19 (Bruce Kennedy); The Q£$, 3, No. 1 (February 1982), 5-7 (Alan S. Mosier); South Bend Tribune (March 29, 1981) (Pat Fenelon); Sunday Sun-Times [Chicago] (September 21, 1980) (Connie Fletcher), and reprinted in San Francisco Examiner (October 15, 1980), E7, and CBook, 5, No. 2 (June 1982), 459; Whig-Standard Magazine (January 17, 1981), 17-18 (David Barber), and reprinted in CBook, 4, No. 4 (December 1981), 391-392; Wilson Library Bulletin, 55 (December 1980), 294 (Jon Breen); Worcester Telegram (October 12, 1980) (Paul S. Clarkson); WW, 3, No. 3 (January 1981), 7 (George H. Scheetz).
C2312. Tales for a Winter's Night, [by] Arthur Conan Doyle. Chicago: Academy Chicago, [1989]. 207 p. Cover design by Albert Richardson. Contains eight stories from Round the Fire Stories, including ManW and Lost.
C2313. The Uncollected Sherlock Holmes. Compiled by Richard Lancelyn Green. [Harmondsworth]: Penguin Books, [1983]. 400 p. Cover design by John Gorham. First issue, limited to 25 numbered copies.
C2314. The Uncollected Sherlock Holmes. Compiled by Richard Lancelyn Green. [Harmondsworth]: Penguin Books, [1983]. 400 p. Cover illustration of Holmes by Paget. Contents: Preface. - Introduction. - The Field Bazaar. - How Watson Learned the Trick. - To an Undiscerning Critic. - The Stonor Case. - The Crown Diamond. - Prefaces. - Some Personalia About Mr. Sherlock Holmes. - Sherlock Holmes on the Screen. - Sidelights on Sherlock Holmes. - A Sherlock Holmes Competition. - The Background to Sherlock Holmes. - The True Story of Sherlock Holmes. - The Last of Sherlock Holmes. - Plot for Sherlock Holmes Story. - The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes: A Review by Joseph Bell. - Sherlock Holmes Parodies, by J.M. Barrie. - Sir Arthur Conan Doyle or, An Ungrateful Father, by Beverley Nichols. - Notes. Reviews: BSM, No. 38 (Summer 1984), 42-49 (Bliss Austin); EQMM, 84 (August 1984), 113 (Allen J. Hubin); Shropshire Star (February 18, 1984) (P.S.); SHJ, 16, No. 4 (Summer 1984), 110 (Nicholas Utechin). New printing 1993.
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