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in 1976 I came across a UK paperback (Futura) of The Adventures of Solar Pons
by August Derleth.
I’d heard of Derleth through his fantasy and science fiction
writing. Many years before I’d devoured the Sherlock Holmes stories and since
Conan Doyle’s demise there’d been a steady stream of so-called new Holmes cases
penned by new hands, not least being Adrian Conan Doyle and John Dickson Carr’s
The Exploits of Sherlock Holmes (1954).
Pons was born about 1880 in Prague. Public school education, Oxford 1899. Unmarried. Member: Savile, Diogenes, Athenaeum, Cliff Dwellers, Lambs. Established private inquiry practice at 7B Praed Street, 1907. British Intelligence, World Wars I and II. Widely travelled. Residences: New York, Chicago, Paris, Vienna, Prague, Rome, 7B Praed Street, London W2. Telephone Ambassador 1000.
As
a young man of nineteen attending the University of Wisconsin, and having
learned from Conan Doyle that there would be no more Sherlock Holmes stories,
Derleth stabbed a finger at a random spot in his calendar and made a note: ‘In
re – Sherlock Holmes’. When that date arrived he sat down and wrote 'The
Adventure of the Black Narcissus', featuring his pastiche creation Solar Pons.
It sold immediately to Dragnet magazine and he went on to pen further
adventures. In one day, by missing classes, he penned three pastiches. His
impetus came to a sudden halt as the stock market collapse of 1929 swept away
many magazines.
The Memoirs of Solar Pons (1951),
The Return of Solar Pons (1958),
The Reminiscences of Solar Pons (1961) and
The Casebook of Solar Pons (1965).
The Chronicles of Solar Pons (1973) appeared
posthumously, Derleth dying in 1971.
It
is perhaps obvious that Derleth chose to echo the Holmes titles in a number of
books. The chronicler of Pons’ adventures is Dr Lyndon Parker; they met in mid-1919
or maybe June 1921 (there’s a fascinating chronology at the end of The
Reminiscences.
As
Vincent Starrett says in his introduction, ‘Solar Pons is not a caricature of
Sherlock Holmes. He is, rather, a clever impersonator, with a twinkle in his
eye, which tells us that he knows he is not Holmes, and knows that we know it,
but that he hopes we will like him anyway for what he symbolizes.’
Enjoy
these stories as they were intended, loving pastiches of the Master’s
consulting detective. At present these stories are not available on Kindle.
NOTE. Since writing this post, I've learned about a superb site all about Solar Pons. Definitely worth a lengthy browse. http://www.solarpons.com/
NOTE. Since writing this post, I've learned about a superb site all about Solar Pons. Definitely worth a lengthy browse. http://www.solarpons.com/
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