This week I am
truly honored to have a Sample Sunday piece from Texas author and legend Bill
Crider. While primarily known for his Sheriff Dan Rhodes series, Bill does a
lot of different things under the writing big top. The excerpt below comes from
his humorous young adult novel The Girl
Who Wanted to be Sherlock Holmes which
is also a suitable read for us adults.
Amazon Synopsis: “Shirley Holmes believes she's a descendant of another Holmes. Sherlock. You say he's a fictional character? Don't try to tell that to Shirley. When there's a murder at her high school, Shirley's determined to find the killer, along with Ralph, her willing "Watson." THE GIRL WHO WANTED TO BE SHERLOCK HOLMES is fast and fun for all ages.”
Chapter
1
Before I tell you about finding the
dead man, I have to tell you about a girl I know.
Her name's Shirley Holmes, and her
name is very important to her. That's
because about a hundred years ago, more or less, there was a famous detective
named Sherlock Holmes.
Shirley Holmes. Sherlock Holmes.
You see the connection? Neither do I, since as I tried to explain to
Shirley, Sherlock Holmes is a fictional character, not a real person.
"He's just a person in
stories," is the way I put it.
"He's not real."
"And just how do you know that,
Ralph-o?" she asked, looking down at me.
She's about the same height I am, which is five-seven, but somehow she
seems taller. I don't know how she does
it.
And that's just one of the annoying
things about her. Another one is that she never fails to call me The Ralphster,
or Ralph-o, or Ralphola, or The Ralphmeister.
It’s not very dignified if you ask me.
Of course Ralph's my name; I can't
deny that, as much as I wish that I could.
If I'd had any say-so in it, I'd have been called Clint, or maybe
Thorne, like a guy on the soap opera that my father watches every day. Maybe you've seen it. The Bold and the Beautiful. But of course I didn't have any say-so, and I
got named Ralph. It could be worse, I
guess. I could have been named
Fauntleroy, maybe, or Alphonse.
I can see that I've drifted off the
point here, which is something that I'm prone to do, according to Ms. Turkel,
my English teacher. She's always writing
crabby little notes in red ink in the margin of my papers, saying things like
"This is really very interesting, Ralph, but what does it have to do with
your thesis?"
She calls me Ralph, naturally. All the teachers do. The name's right there on my Permanent
Record, so what can I do about it?
But I was telling you about
Shirley. She has red hair and green eyes
and freckles, and the truth is I like the way she looks a whole lot, but I'd
never come out and tell her that. We're
both juniors at Harry Whittington High School, and we take a lot of the same
classes.
We've
known each other a long time, ever since second grade, but I've only noticed
how nice she looks in the last year or so.
I never paid much attention to things like that about girls very much
before, but I've started noticing it pretty often since about the ninth
grade. It has a lot to do with hormones,
according to Mr. Wilder. He teaches
biology, so he knows what he's talking about.
Bill Crider ©2010
Thanks for running this, Kevin.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteThis looks like a fun read! I already like Ralph-o just from this excerpt, so I'm sure I'll like Shirley. Great stuff, Bill.
Thank you for doing this, Bill. Truly honored.
ReplyDeleteHarry Whittington High School, Bill? A little tribute to the writer of the same name? :-)
ReplyDeleteThis definitely seems like an enjoyable read.