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The Boscombe Valley Mystery
The Boscombe Valley Mystery | Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir
20 posts | 16 read | 1 to read
About the Author-Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle KStJ, DL (22 May 1859 7 July 1930) was a Scottish physician and writer who is most noted for his fictional stories about the detective Sherlock Holmes, which are generally considered milestones in the field of crime fiction. He is also known for writing the fictional adventures of a second character he invented, Professor Challenger, and for popularising the mystery of the Mary Celeste.He was a prolific writer whose other works include fantasy and science fiction stories, plays, romances, poetry, non-fiction, and historical novels.-Wikipedia
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dabbe
The Boscombe Valley Mystery | Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir
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#NoPlaceLikeHolmes
@Cuilin
#puzzlefun

If interested, click below for a jumble and cryptogram for “The Boscombe Valley Mystery.“ 😍
Here's the link: https://bit.ly/3vd4Na4

Librarybelle Thank you! 1mo
dabbe @Librarybelle 💚💙💚 1mo
CogsOfEncouragement I finally made time today to do the puzzles. Very fun! Thanks for sharing this, and making the #NoPlaceLikeHolmes BR extra enjoyable. 1mo
dabbe @CogsOfEncouragement You just made my day! 🤩😃😍 1mo
35 likes4 comments
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dabbe
The Boscombe Valley Mystery | Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir
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Librarybelle I again had my suspicions about the conclusion, which I normally cannot figure out the guilty party until the reveal. I thought Conan Doyle is really getting into the storytelling groove - as we progress, the stories are a bit more polished, a bit easier to read. Or, maybe I am just getting used to Conan Doyle‘s writing style at this point. 1mo
CatLass007 I think I‘m enjoying the short stories more than the novels. But that could be because Conan Doyle is hitting his stride with the character. 1mo
IndoorDame I actually knew who the villain would be this time which never happens! though I totally didn‘t work out the details of why ahead of time. Not sure if that means I‘ve read this one before and don‘t remember it, or if the setup is just a bit obvious 🤔 I‘m leaning towards the latter. 1mo
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dabbe @Librarybelle I think you hit the combo and that both apply because I also feel the same way! These Victorian writers can be long-winded, can't they? 🤩😂😃 1mo
dabbe @CatLass007 It'll be interesting when we read the other two novels down the road if he polishes them up better than his first two. 1mo
dabbe @IndoorDame There definitely was something “off“ with the elder McCarthy character. Who argues with their son when they just come home? I definitely smelled a red herring over that! 🤩😃😂 1mo
CatLass007 It will be very interesting. 1mo
kelli7990 I like the short stories better than the novels. 1mo
CogsOfEncouragement I was amused when Mary says W is always interested in SH's cases & he replies: I should be ungrateful if I were not, seeing what I gained thru one of them. 😍 At the scene, W says SH gathered up what seemed to be dust. I thought this was ash SH would identify from cigar, etc & was happy to see I was right. Ballarat was a clever word to have Turner misunderstand. The culprit is - “Mr. John Turner,“ cried the hotel waiter... was very funny to me. 1mo
dabbe @CogsOfEncouragement That was a cute thing W said to Mary! And good thing Holmes is a virtuoso when it comes to tobacco ash! 😂 1mo
SpellboundReader Just a general comment that I think this is my fav story so far. Perhaps Doyle has hit his writing stride or maybe my impatient mind just likes the short stories better. 1mo
dabbe @BeeCurious There are quite a few gems in the Adventures! 🤩 1mo
42 likes13 comments
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dabbe
The Boscombe Valley Mystery | Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir
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Librarybelle Anyone who reads British mysteries or has watched Midsomer Murders knows how dangerous the countryside can be! 😂 It‘s almost deceiving how the peaceful countryside can be deadly and hold secrets. 1mo
CatLass007 People are people no matter where they live. I‘ve lived in urban, suburban, and rural areas and I‘ve discovered that kind, friendly people live in New York and that rude, inconsiderate people live in East Tennessee. 1mo
IndoorDame I didn‘t really think about it until you asked, but the setup of the adjoining estate and farm is the perfect example of appearance obfuscating reality. It‘s not until the very end that you can pick apart what‘s really going on there. 1mo
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dabbe @Librarybelle Especially because one is so isolated! You can yell your head off in the country if someone is attacking you, but no one will probably hear you! Yet in the city people might hear but do nothing because it's not their business. 1mo
dabbe @CatLass007 Very true. I wonder where a killer would rather kill--the country or city? 🤔 1mo
dabbe @IndoorDame Right? People “assumed“ Turner and McCarthy were friends based on their association in Australia, yet nothing could be further from the truth. 1mo
Read4life I enjoyed their story outside of London. I think the different locale added to the more polished feel of this one. 1mo
dabbe @Read4life It makes it more of a real quest, doesn't it? And with the train racing to their destination, it adds to the suspense. 1mo
kelli7990 I liked that this story was set in Australia. 1mo
CogsOfEncouragement I don't think there is a fundamental difference in the morals of city people and country people. Human nature is human nature. Evil can be found anywhere. 1mo
dabbe @kelli7990 We've now had the western US, India, and Australia! 🤩 1mo
dabbe @CogsOfEncouragement I agree. I do think the country setting could be scarier and lonelier perhaps, but people are people wherever they are. 1mo
39 likes12 comments
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dabbe
The Boscombe Valley Mystery | Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir
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Librarybelle I was a little surprised over Holmes‘ response to the confession. I had not thought of this response in conjunction with his response to Identity…I must not be a very detailed reader! But, this response seems almost more sympathetic than his response in Identity. I didn‘t get the full patronizing feel from this one like I did with the Identity conclusion. 1mo
CatLass007 I guess it means Holmes has a philosophy of “Let the punishment fit the crime.” I also think it means that Holmes isn‘t a completely cold-hearted bastard. 1mo
IndoorDame I definitely saw a similarity in the “protecting the delicate sensibilities of women” sense. I also see that Holmes clearly thinks he‘s more fit than the justice system to judge people and dispense sentences 😂. I wondered in this one though… the happily ever aspect is sweet, but will the courts really just drop such a public case because James was acquitted or will someone else pay for what Turner did? And does Holmes care about that? 1mo
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dabbe @Librarybelle @CatLass007 @IndoorDame ... I guess when you're the world's only private consulting detective, you can pass judgment however you'd like. Watson never tells us, though, why the police didn't keep looking for a murderer after acquitting McCarthy. This one didn't have the resolution sewed up so tightly as the others. And wouldn't McCarthy want to also know who killed his father? Even if he was a jerk? 1mo
Read4life @dabbe And not just McCarthy wanting to know who killed his father. Wouldn‘t others in the area want to know if a killer walks amongst them? 1mo
dabbe @Read4life You'd think that, wouldn't you? It's also hard for me to believe that Lestrade would just let McCarthy go without having someone (usually the wrong person when the police are involved) to take his place in jail. Doesn't somebody have to pay? 1mo
kelli7990 I didn‘t notice any similarities but maybe it‘s because I‘m not a detailed reader. 1mo
CogsOfEncouragement I took it that Holmes agreed that McCarthy got what he deserved. He wasn't concerned with some sort of justice for him. When Holmes says it is interesting that McCarthy had the Hatherley Farm rent free, I think Holmes suspected there to be a reason other than a gesture of friendship - such as blackmail. When he hears McCarthy wanted the marriage of the children and Turner didn't, he asks - Do you not deduce something from that? 1mo
dabbe @CogsOfEncouragement There are quite a few stories where Holmes does not feel beholden to necessarily tell the police anything. And since Turner was dying anyway, Holmes thinks he's been punished enough. 1mo
CogsOfEncouragement @dabbe I'll keep that in mind as we read on. In A Case of Identity there were a number of reasons SH doesn't tell Mary, or try to help get the stepfather prosecuted for something that would be considered against the law at the time. In this one there is more than just Turner dying soon. For example, McCarthy was no innocent, Turner's daughter is innocent and loves her father, and young McCarthy does not take after his father. 1mo
dabbe @CogsOfEncouragement Young McCarthy's no innocent either, having married a barmaid that he didn't love. I think Holmes even describes him as not being the brightest bulb. Still, like you said, he's nowhere near as bad as his father, and he does love Alice. The two young ones shouldn't have to pay the price for their fathers' mistakes. 1mo
36 likes11 comments
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dabbe
The Boscombe Valley Mystery | Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir
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Librarybelle I honestly didn‘t read into anything wrong with the marriage. I‘m not married nor have a significant other, so I cannot speak from personal experience, but she knows hanging with Holmes makes Watson happy, plus it gives her some quiet time. As for his dress, I just accepted that comment as Holmes‘ snobbishness. 🤷🏻‍♀️ 1mo
CatLass007 It never crossed my mind that the Watsons had marital problems. It‘s something to consider. 1mo
IndoorDame 🤣🤣🤣 That comment jumped out at me for a totally different reason. This is the first place I‘ve noticed Doyle using formulaic writing. But he tends to interject a Holmes deduction about something unrelated to the case early on like that. And it becomes a staple of both Sherlock‘s personality and the whole genre. 1mo
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dabbe @IndoorDame Excellent word choice with “staple.“ We do come to expect Holmes showing us his incredible power of deduction right at the very beginning, don't we? 1mo
dabbe @CatLass007 Mary is quite accommodating in letting Watson jet around with Holmes. She needs to pay attention more to how he looks, though! 🤩😍😃 1mo
dabbe @Librarybelle To not notice how your husband looks early in a marriage may not be a good thing or it may not be anything. I know my husband has (on a few occasions) questioned me as to why I let him go out the door with, say, wrinkled pants. My answer usually is: “25+ years of marriage, that's why.“ 😂🤩😍 1mo
kelli7990 I don‘t have a husband or a boyfriend so I don‘t know but I didn‘t think about the Watsons having marriage problems. 1mo
CogsOfEncouragement I saw it as a very loving, selfless move on Mary's part to encourage Watson to go. She knows how much he enjoys being a part of the cases. Why would she stop him from doing something he loves? They want each other happy. I took the bad shaving as an entertaining way for Sherlock to be observant and make an alarmingly accurate deduction. I don't think we need blame Mary or think Doyle meant to. 1mo
dabbe @CogsOfEncouragement She is quite an amazing woman! 🤩 1mo
SpellboundReader I just thought Mary realized Watson needed a change of scenery but otherwise didn't read any troublesome motivators into the equation. 1mo
dabbe @BeeCurious She also probably knows by now how much Watson loves to be involved with Holmes's cases, including her own! 🤩 1mo
Aimeesue @dabbe Wrinkled pants! 🤣 I mean, men can use mirrors, can‘t they? But honestly, having married a military man myself, I have to say that the military drills that in to a person - attention to detail, starting with personal appearance. Watson‘s slipping! 1mo
dabbe @Aimeesue my 1st husband and high school sweetheart (gasp) was in the Navy. He insisted that I always fold his t-shirts military style. When done, you could stack them like the folds of an accordion! 😂 1mo
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Read4life
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Pickpick

#NoPlaceLikeHolmes discussion in a couple of days. Looking forward to it.
I‘m really enjoying revisiting these stories. 💙💙
#BookSpinBingo #readyourTBR #readyourebooks #ReadAway2024 #SeriesLove2024

dabbe I am, too! It's a delight to read one every week! 🤩😍😃 1mo
TheSpineView Fantastic! 1mo
TheAromaofBooks Woohoo!!! 1mo
DieAReader 🥳Great! 1mo
41 likes4 comments
blurb
dabbe
The Boscombe Valley Mystery | Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir
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#NoPlaceLikeHolmes
@Cuilin

Fabulous discussion today, Sherlockians! Next up: “The Boscombe Valley Mystery.“ Below is a study guide with summary (spoiler alert!) Discussion next Saturday!
Here's the link: https://bit.ly/3TxrcZa

Have a lovely week! 💚💙💚

kelli7990 Yay! 1mo
Librarybelle Thanks! 1mo
dabbe @kelli7990 🤩😍😃 1mo
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dabbe @Librarybelle 🤩😘😃 1mo
SpellboundReader Thank you! 🙂 1mo
dabbe @BeeCurious 🤩😃😍 1mo
47 likes6 comments
review
Malisa
The Boscombe Valley Mystery | Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir
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Pickpick

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

review
Carolhreads
The Boscombe Valley Mystery | Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir
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Pickpick

👍⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

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vicgreentoriafield
The Boscombe Valley Mystery | Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir
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Picture taken when I was doing a bit of time killing checking out different editions of Sherlock Holmes. The quote is stamped onto the back of the book. I love it and the texture!

Richryan52 @vicgreentoriafield I love all things Holmes and write Sherlock Holmes mysteries 6y
Tadams4 Nice font and lovely texture! 6y
vicgreentoriafield @Richryan52 that's awesome! 6y
Richryan52 @vicgreentoriafield My first book The Vatican Cameos is up for an award. I put a post up yesterday. Can you throw a vote my way? 6y
41 likes4 comments
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OrangeMooseReads
The Boscombe Valley Mystery | Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir
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Pickpick

First read of 2018. A short 3 issues on Serial Reader. Arthur Conan Doyle gives us another Sherlock easy solve mystery. I forgot how much I enjoy Doyle‘s writing style and how annoying yet somehow likable Sherlock is. Sherlock really is an a$$. I will indeed be peppering my reading with the Adventures of Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson again this year.

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jpmcwisemorgan
The Boscombe Valley Mystery | Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir
Pickpick

I love the little bit of sass from Holmes directed at Lestrade. And his fascination with ash continues unabated. I wonder how that would work out in today's world? This story shows Holmes' reasoning without the bizarre introduction of Mormons, etc. Thats a plus!

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jpmcwisemorgan
The Boscombe Valley Mystery | Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir
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I haven't posted much in my #Sherlocked adventures because I've been saving this quote, which all showed up in the current BBC run of Sherlock. I think that right now we could all use someone to rely on. #ReadersResist

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InLibrisVeritas
The Boscombe Valley Mystery | Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir
Pickpick

I was about worried this one would turn out to be another "meh" story, but it picked up quite nicely! And we even get a glimpse of a more understanding Sherlock. #sherlocked

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gossamerchild
The Boscombe Valley Mystery | Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir
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Pickpick

Not too bad. Though I did appreciate witnessing Sherlock feeling compassion for someone. #sherlocked #serialreader #readalong

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AdaChivers
The Boscombe Valley Mystery | Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir
Pickpick

This one I really enjoyed!

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Theresa
The Boscombe Valley Mystery | Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir

Lestrade to Sherlock, "...I repeatedly told her that there was nothing which you could do which I had not already done." ???#sherlocked

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tjwill
The Boscombe Valley Mystery | Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir
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I think I know who the killer is...but sometimes it's hard to tell if I'm thinking what Sherlock is thinking. #sherlocked

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Jhullie
The Boscombe Valley Mystery | Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir
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Pickpick

Nothing earth shattering here, just a simple little mystery all neatly tied up by the end.
#Sherlocked

jessdean Cool pic👌🏽 7y
60 likes1 comment
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jpmcwisemorgan
The Boscombe Valley Mystery | Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir
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Next up in our @SerialReader readalong! Are you joining us in getting #Sherlocked?

Kathrin That one starts tomorrow or Saturday? I still have an issue from the case of identity... I might have missed a day. 7y
jpmcwisemorgan @Kathrin To be honest, I think I've lost track. I'm pretty sure it's tomorrow but I also know some people are just reading all the issues at once because the stories are so short. I typically save a couple and read more than one at a time. Maybe @Theresa @InLibrisVeritas @kmdartist or @Daisy had a better idea of where we are??? 7y
InLibrisVeritas @Kathrin I think tomorrow was the starting day. I'm a bit behind as well, so I'm sort of unsure. @jpmcwisemorgan 7y
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jpmcwisemorgan @Kathrin and @InLibrisVeritas Excellent! We can all be unsure together! 7y
Kathrin @jpmcwisemorgan Sounds like a plan! 7y
moranadatter @jpmcwisemorgan Saturday. A Case of Identity started today and it is 2 issues. 7y
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