The Private Wife of Sherlock Holmes

Mystery & Suspense, Historical Mystery, Traditional British, Women Sleuths
Cover of the book The Private Wife of Sherlock Holmes by Carole Nelson Douglas, Wishlist Publishing
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Author: Carole Nelson Douglas ISBN: 1230000136225
Publisher: Wishlist Publishing Publication: May 29, 2013
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Carole Nelson Douglas
ISBN: 1230000136225
Publisher: Wishlist Publishing
Publication: May 29, 2013
Imprint:
Language: English

IRENE ADLER . . . She’s one of the most mysterious women in literature, an American and the only woman to have outwitted the world's greatest consulting detective, Sherlock Holmes.

This novella, “The Private Wife of Sherlock Holmes,” reports Adler and Holmes's most recent and intriguing encounter in post-Jack the Ripper London, from Baker Street to a high society brothel. Shocking, my dear Holmes!

"It's an amusing story, involving Holmes and Irene meeting the Prince of Wales in a house of ill repute."—Peter E. Blau, B.S.I., editor, Scuttlebutt newsletter from the Spermaceti Press

ON FILM . . . You've seen Irene Adler as the fetchingly treacherous minx paired with Robert Downey Jr.’s in his portrayal of Sherlock Holmes as an action hero and human calculating machine. You can see her as an apparently naked dominatrix in the BBC's modern take on a young, totally wired Sherlock Holmes. You can see her as Holmes's nemesis/love in "Elementary" on CBS.

Or you can read about her further adventures after she bested Holmes in "A Scandal in Bohemia," as written by New York Times Notable Book of the Year author Carole Nelson Douglas, author of the acclaimed Good Night,
Mr. Holmes and seven other novels following the adventures of Irene Adler and Sherlock Holmes after “Scandal.”

According to the critics from the New York Times, Publishers Weekly and daily newspapers, Irene Adler as “the dashing heroine in Carole Nelson Douglas’s enchanting Victorian series” is "a Victorian age Ms. who blithely flouts conventions and triumphs in not one, but two careers—opera diva and detective” . . . “unconventional, irreverent, at least a century before her time—witty, competent, competitive, adventurous and like Holmes himself, fascinated with the curious and the criminal” . . . “the only woman Sherlock Holmes admired and indeed she lives up to the honor.”

REVIEWS:

“I think Carole Nelson Douglas has told the exact truth about Ms. Adler, and whenever I reread “A Scandal in Bohemia” that truth will be part of the story for me.” —Chris Redmond, B.S.I., ASH in The Waterloo Sherlockian Letter.

“To capture the attention of the misogynistic and asexual Mr. Holmes, a woman would need to be quite remarkable, and Douglas’s Irene is beyond remarkable."—Mary Willis Walker in Mostly Murder

“Douglas has made Adler a superb detective and invented a perfectly delightful—and perfectly puzzling—series of cases for her.” —Judy Alter in The Fort Worth Press

“Plenty of Sherlockian deductions, even from Sherlock Holmes himself, who plays a good role in all the intrigue. But it’s Irene’s show all the way, and highly entertaining. You won’t be disappointed!”—Mostly Murder

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

IRENE ADLER . . . She’s one of the most mysterious women in literature, an American and the only woman to have outwitted the world's greatest consulting detective, Sherlock Holmes.

This novella, “The Private Wife of Sherlock Holmes,” reports Adler and Holmes's most recent and intriguing encounter in post-Jack the Ripper London, from Baker Street to a high society brothel. Shocking, my dear Holmes!

"It's an amusing story, involving Holmes and Irene meeting the Prince of Wales in a house of ill repute."—Peter E. Blau, B.S.I., editor, Scuttlebutt newsletter from the Spermaceti Press

ON FILM . . . You've seen Irene Adler as the fetchingly treacherous minx paired with Robert Downey Jr.’s in his portrayal of Sherlock Holmes as an action hero and human calculating machine. You can see her as an apparently naked dominatrix in the BBC's modern take on a young, totally wired Sherlock Holmes. You can see her as Holmes's nemesis/love in "Elementary" on CBS.

Or you can read about her further adventures after she bested Holmes in "A Scandal in Bohemia," as written by New York Times Notable Book of the Year author Carole Nelson Douglas, author of the acclaimed Good Night,
Mr. Holmes and seven other novels following the adventures of Irene Adler and Sherlock Holmes after “Scandal.”

According to the critics from the New York Times, Publishers Weekly and daily newspapers, Irene Adler as “the dashing heroine in Carole Nelson Douglas’s enchanting Victorian series” is "a Victorian age Ms. who blithely flouts conventions and triumphs in not one, but two careers—opera diva and detective” . . . “unconventional, irreverent, at least a century before her time—witty, competent, competitive, adventurous and like Holmes himself, fascinated with the curious and the criminal” . . . “the only woman Sherlock Holmes admired and indeed she lives up to the honor.”

REVIEWS:

“I think Carole Nelson Douglas has told the exact truth about Ms. Adler, and whenever I reread “A Scandal in Bohemia” that truth will be part of the story for me.” —Chris Redmond, B.S.I., ASH in The Waterloo Sherlockian Letter.

“To capture the attention of the misogynistic and asexual Mr. Holmes, a woman would need to be quite remarkable, and Douglas’s Irene is beyond remarkable."—Mary Willis Walker in Mostly Murder

“Douglas has made Adler a superb detective and invented a perfectly delightful—and perfectly puzzling—series of cases for her.” —Judy Alter in The Fort Worth Press

“Plenty of Sherlockian deductions, even from Sherlock Holmes himself, who plays a good role in all the intrigue. But it’s Irene’s show all the way, and highly entertaining. You won’t be disappointed!”—Mostly Murder

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