A collection of the fictional detective's cases that were originally suppressed because of the embarrassment they might cause public figures, or Holmes himself, by such authors as H. Paul Jeffers, P.C. Hodgell, and Jay Sheckley.
The Darlington substitute scandal / Henry Slesar -- The Adventure of the old Russian woman / H. Paul Jeffers -- The Adventure of the noble husband / Peter Cannon -- The Case of the woman in the cellar / Pat Mullen -- The Adventure of the boulevard assassin / Kathleen Brady -- The Case of the ancient british barrow / Terry McGarry -- The Adventure of the dying ship / Edward D. Hoch -- The Revenge of the Fenian Brotherhood / Carole Bugge -- The Affair of the counterfeit countess / Craig Shaw Gardner -- The Woman / Aline Myette-Volsky -- The Little problem of the Grosvenor Square Furniture Van / Patrick LoBrutto -- A Ballad of the White Plague / P.C. Hodgell -- The Adventure of Vanderbilt and the Yeggman / Roberta Rogow -- The Secret marriage of Sherlock Holmes / Shariann Lewitt -- The Case of Vittoria the Circus Belle / Jay Sheckley.
Marvin Nathan Kaye was an American mystery, fantasy, science fiction, horror author, anthologist, and editor. He was also a magician and theater actor. Kaye was a World Fantasy Award winner and served as co-publisher and editor of Weird Tales Magazine.
This is Marvin Kaye’s third Holmes anthology. Like all anthologies, the quality of the stories vary widely. The overall product is very good and this one is much better than his last outing, “The Resurrected Holmes” in that these are straight pastiches, not authors pretending to write in the style of a great author writing in the Doyle vein. (I know this sounds convoluted but it makes sense i.e.:Marvin Kaye writing a Holmes story in the way he imagines Rex Stout would.) Fortunately the umbrella premise for this book is more straightforward, here the linking theme is stories that were suppressed by Watson to avoid scandal. There are some interesting stories here that come very close to the Doyle style while others are stylistically different yet effective all the same. An example of the former is “The Darlington Substitution Scandal” by Henry Slesar. This little tale bears certain similarities to The Man with the Twisted Lip but has far more sinister implications. A frightfully powerful example of the latter is provided by P.C. Hodgel in his remarkable memoir of Holmes childhood entitled “A Ballad of the White Plague”. While no collection is perfect this one (as well as “The Mammoth Book of New Sherlock Holmes Adventures” edited by Mike Ashley. Carroll & Graf 1997) ranks very highly.
Not too bad all said and done. I'm not sure that I really enjoyed the two stories at the end, the one regarding Holmes' childhood and the one regarding Watson's scarred memories. They seemed a bit out of place to me, though I suppose that's what the author's were going for. Not a book I'm going to read again, but better than many Sherlock Holmes books I have read.