Books from Sherlock Holmes

Blackstone's Statutes on Criminal Law 2019-2020

Unsurpassed in authority, reliability and accuracy; the 2019-2020 edition has been fully revised and updated to incorporate all relevant legislation for criminal law courses. Blackstone's Statutes on Criminal Law is an abridged collection of legislation carefully reviewed and selected byMatthew Dyson.With unparalleled coverage of criminal law, Blackstone's Statutes on Criminal Law leads the market: consistently recommended by lecturers and relied on by students for exam and course use.Blackstone's Statutes on Criminal Law is:- Trusted: ideal for exam use- Practical: find what you need instantly- Reliable: current, comprehensive coverage- Relevant: content reviewed to match your courseOnline resourcesThe accompanying online resources include video guides to reading and interpreting statutes, web links, exam tips, and an interactive sample Act of Parliament.
Sherlock Holmes
Has a good practical knowledge of British law.
Books from Sherlock Holmes

On Poisons, in Relation to Medical Jurisprudence and Medicine



Sherlock Holmes
In "A Study in Scarlet," John Watson makes a list of Sherlock's knowledge on various subjects, in an attempt to deduce what Sherlock's work is related to. Here are a few examples: -Botany.—Variable. Well up in belladonna, opium, and poisons generally. Knows nothing of practical gardening.
Books from Sherlock Holmes

Forensic Science

The only A-Z reference work on forensic science, one of the most intriguing and exciting fields in criminological studies. From dandruff to DNA, from ammunition to infrared spectrophotometry, forensic scientists employ the commonplace and the esoteric to get their man or woman. Forensic Science is the only comprehensive reference work accessible to nonexperts on this fast-changing and ever-fascinating field of criminological study. Readers will learn how the latest scientific breakthroughs and the well-honed instincts of forensics experts come together to provide the clues and amass the evidence to bring America's most notorious criminals to justice. From famous firsts in forensics to possible future developments in the science, the expert team of contributors put together by William Tilstone, executive director of the National Forensic Science Technology Center, examines techniques and technologies, key cases, critical controversies, and ethical and legal issues. * 300+ A-Z entries covering all aspects of forensic science, including crime scene investigation, evidence identification, and the historical development of forensics * 30+ photographs illustrating techniques such as the examination of ink and handwriting, hairs and fibers, guns and ammunition, and foot and tire prints * Clear, descriptive entries, geared toward high school students and readers interested in criminology or criminal justice * Dozens of real life examples from the fields of criminology, justice, and forensic science, revealing the latest and most advanced techniques
Sherlock Holmes
We know that texts,manuscripts and treatises concerning criminology and forensic techniques are absorbed and critiqued. We gather that there is practical knowledge of English Law and he would refer to books for heraldry and other factual technical details including in his retirement beekeeping (Apiculture).
Books from Sherlock Holmes

The Letters of Gustave Flaubert: 1830-1857

Gustave Flaubert wrote to his mistress, Louise Colet: "An author in his book must be like God in the universe, present everywhere and visible nowhere." In his books, Flaubert sought to observe that principle; but in his many impassioned letters he allowed his feelings to overflow, revealing himself in all of his human complexity. Sensuous, witty, exalted, ironic, grave, analytical, the letters illustrate the artist's life--and they trumpet his artistic opinions--in an outpouring of uninhibited eloquence. An acknowledged master of translation, Francis Steegmuller has given us by far the most generous and varied selection of Flaubert's letters in English. He presents these with an engrossing narrative that places them in the context of the writer's life and times. We follow Flaubert through his unhappy years at law school, through his tumultuous affair with Louise Colet; we share his days and nights amid the temples and brothels of Egypt, then on to Palestine, Turkey, Greece, and Rome. And the letters chronicle one of the central events in literary history--the conception and composition of what has been called the first modern novel, Madame Bovary. Steegmuller's selection concludes with Flaubert's standing trial for immoral writing, Madame Bovary's immediate popular success, and Baudelaire's celebration of its psychological and literary power. Throughout this exposition in Flaubert's own words of his views on life, literature, and the passions, readers of his novels will be powerfully reminded of the fertility of his genius, and delighted by his poetic enthusiasm. "Let us sing to Apollo as in ancient days," he wrote to Louise Colet, "and breathe deeply of the fresh cold air of Parnassus; let us strum our guitars and clash our cymbals and whirl like dervishes in the eternal hubbub of forms and ideas!" Flaubert's letters are documents of life and art; lovers of literature and of the literary adventure can rejoice in this edition.
Sherlock Holmes
He quotes the Roman poet Horace (perhaps he remembers him from school) and the Persian poet Hafiz, and seems to have dipped into Gustave Flaubert’s correspondence, since he quotes a letter from the French author to George Sand.
Books from Sherlock Holmes

Hafiz

In what might be one of the most definitive English translations of Persian mystic and poet, Hafiz, the English and Urdu translator Khalid Hameed Shaida blends an empathetic pen with what must be a deeply intuitive soul. Tender and sincere, Hafiz: The Voice of God, A Hundred Odes is a powerful collection of Hafiz's first one hundred lyrical poems, or ghazals, that bring to fruition love, mysticism, and other early Sufi themes. With a keen sense of timing and verse, the translator is able to capture the lyrical, at times playful, quality as well as Hafiz's profound messages that possess elements of modern surrealism. This compilation stresses form and verse as it weaves a nearly magical intensity that will have new readers falling in love with an ancient master of poetry and aficionados of the Persian mystic period appreciating timeless odes in a creative and inspired voice.
Sherlock Holmes
He quotes the Roman poet Horace (perhaps he remembers him from school) and the Persian poet Hafiz, and seems to have dipped into Gustave Flaubert’s correspondence, since he quotes a letter from the French author to George Sand.
Books from Sherlock Holmes

The Epistles of Horace

My aim is to take familiar things and makePoetry of them, and do it in such a wayThat it looks as if it was as easy as could beFor anybody to do it . . . the power of makingA perfectly wonderful thing out of nothing much.--from "The Art of Poetry" When David Ferry's translation of The Odes of Horace appeared in 1997, Bernard Knox, writing in The New York Review of Books, called it "a Horace for our times." In The Epistles of Horace, Ferry has translated the work in which Horace perfected the conversational verse medium that gives his voice such dazzling immediacy, speaking in these letters with such directness, wit, and urgency to young writers, to friends, to his patron Maecenas, to Emperor Augustus himself. It is the voice of a free man, talking about how to get along in a Roman world full of temptations, opportunities, and contingencies, and how to do so with one's integrity intact. Horace's world, so unlike our own and yet so like it, comes to life in these poems. And there are also the poems--the famous "Art of Poetry" and others--about the tasks and responsibilities of the writer: truth to the demands of one's medium, fearless clear-sighted self-knowledge, and unillusioned, uncynical realism, joyfully recognizing the world for what it is.Available in ebook for the first time, this English-only edition of The Epistles of Horace includes Ferry's translation along with his introduction, notes, and glossary. "Reading these versions we feel as if the streets that Horace walked have opened onto our own" (Peter Campion, Raritan).
Sherlock Holmes
He quotes the Roman poet Horace (perhaps he remembers him from school) and the Persian poet Hafiz, and seems to have dipped into Gustave Flaubert’s correspondence, since he quotes a letter from the French author to George Sand.
Books from Sherlock Holmes

The Martyrdom of Man

The Martyrdom of Man (1872) is a secular, "universal" history of the Western world. Structurally, it is divided into four "chapters": the first chapter, "War", discusses the imprisonment of men's bodies, the second, "Religion", that of their minds, the third, "Liberty", is the closest thing to a conventional European political and intellectual history, and the fourth, "Intellect", which discusses the cosmogony characteristic of a "universal history".
Sherlock Holmes
Elsewhere he urges Watson to read Winwood Reade’s The Martyrdom of Man, a sort of outline of history from a secular point of view.
Books from Sherlock Holmes

The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci

Throughout his life Leonardo da Vinci carried notebooks in which he scribbled down ideas and opinions as they occurred - personal, domestic, scientific, philosophical, artistic - frequently accompanied by explanatory sketches and diagrams. Surviving manuscripts contain drafts of letters, fanciful fables, rough treatises on the art of painting or the power of water, descriptions of the Medici courts, even jokes. The present selection gives coherence to this rich kaleidoscope of ideas. From it emerges the portrait of a true Renaissance man, whose habit of rigorous enquiry, observation, and experiment, grounded on a philosophic system, led him to conceive of the universe as an organized cosmos corresponding to a work of art.
Sherlock Holmes
He asks Watson if he has read the German philosopher Jean Paul (Richter), implying that he himself has, and in the same conversation shows a knowledge of the work of Thomas Carlyle.
TV Shows from Sherlock Holmes

Doctor Who

The Doctor is a Time Lord: a 900 year old alien with 2 hearts, part of a gifted civilization who mastered time travel. The Doctor saves planets for a living—more of a hobby actually, and the Doctor's very, very good at it.
Sherlock Holmes
Mark Gatiss and Steven Moffat have often slipped Doctor Who references into Sherlock. Shilcott's wall is remarkably similar to how the Doctor decorated his office in "The Invasion of Time" (1978), when he temporarily became President of the Time Lords.
Music from Sherlock Holmes

Les Huguenots: Grand Air

Sherlock Holmes
Having solved the case of The Hound of the Baskervilles, Holmes takes a box for the grand French opera, Les Huguenots by Meyerbeer. In the story it is performed by the De Reszkes siblings. The singers Jean, Edouard (pictured), and Josephine de Reszke actually appeared together in productions of Les Huguenots in London and New York.
Music from Sherlock Holmes

Orlande de Lassus

Sherlock Holmes
In The Adventure of the Bruce-Partington Plans, Holmes is said to be composing a monograph about the polyphonic motets of the Dutch Renaissance composer, Lassus. Watson writes that the book has “since been printed for private circulation, and is said by experts to be the last word on the subject.”
Music from Sherlock Holmes

Niccolò Paganini

Sherlock Holmes
In The Adventure of the Cardboard Box, Dr. Watson reports how, over a bottle of claret, Holmes told “anecdote after anecdote” about the extraordinary violin virtuoso, Paganini.
Music from Sherlock Holmes

Offenbach: Tales of Hoffmann (Recorded 1947)

Sherlock Holmes
In the story The Adventure of the Mazarin Stone, Holmes fools his enemies into thinking he was playing the Barcarolle from The Tales of Hoffman by Offenbach on the violin, when he’s actually playing them a gramophone recording.
Music from Sherlock Holmes

Felix Mendelssohn

Sherlock Holmes
In A Study in Scarlet, Dr. Watson describes Holmes’s skill on the violin as “very remarkable, but as eccentric as all his other accomplishments. That he could play pieces, and difficult pieces, I knew well, because at my request he has played me some of Mendelssohn’s Lieder and other favourites.”
Music from Sherlock Holmes

Pablo de Sarasate

Sherlock Holmes
A preference for German music In The Red-Headed League, Holmes tells Watson he prefers German music to French or Italian. Holmes attends a concert of German works given by Pablo de Sarasate at St. James’s Hall. “It is introspective, and I want to instrospect.” Holmes says.
Music from Sherlock Holmes

Richard Wagner

Sherlock Holmes
A night at the opera Having solved The Adventure of the Red Circle, Holmes and Watson rush to a Wagner night at Covent Garden.
Websites from Sherlock Holmes

The blog of Dr. John. H. Watson

The personal blog of Dr. John. H. Watson
Sherlock Holmes
Mary is reading one of John's blogs about his adventures with Sherlock on a tablet. This is areal website that went up starting with the first season.
Places from Sherlock Holmes

221B Baker Street

221B Baker Street is the London address of the fictional detective Sherlock Holmes, created by author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. In the United Kingdom, postal addresses with a number followed by a letter may indicate a separate address within a larger, often residential building. Baker Street in the late 19th century was a high-class residential district, and Holmes' apartment would probably have been part of a Georgian terrace. At the time the Holmes stories were published, addresses in Baker Street did not go as high as 221. Baker Street was later extended, and in 1932 the Abbey National Building Society moved into premises at 219–229 Baker Street. For many years, Abbey National employed a full-time secretary to answer mail addressed to Sherlock Holmes. In 1990, a blue plaque signifying 221B Baker Street was installed at the Sherlock Holmes Museum, situated elsewhere on the same block, and there followed a 15-year dispute between Abbey National and the Holmes Museum for the right to receive mail addressed to 221B Baker Street. Since the closure of Abbey House in 2005, ownership of the address by the Holmes Museum has not been challenged, despite its location between 237 and 241 Baker Street.
Sherlock Holmes
221B Baker Street is the London address of the fictional detective Sherlock Holmes, created by author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. In the United Kingdom, postal addresses with a number followed by a letter may indicate a separate address within a larger, often residential building.