Patrick Ohl is back this week for Friday Forgotten
Books hosted by Patti Abbott. This
week he is reviewing Anthony Horowitz’s The House of Silk.
––And
the silken, sad, uncertain rustling of each purple curtain
Thrilled me, filled me with fantastic terrors never felt before.
Thrilled me, filled me with fantastic terrors never felt before.
—
Edgar Allan Poe, The Raven
We’ve had something of a Sherlock Holmes
revival in recent years. This is mainly due to the release of Sherlock Holmes, a Hollywood blockbuster
starring Robert Downey Jr. as the immortal sleuth and Jude Law as Watson. I
highly enjoyed the movie, but have major reservations about the sequel, the
trailer to which is even worse than the misleading trailer for the first film!
But I digress. Along with this Hollywood revival of detective films, we’ve seen
Holmes pastiches of all shapes and colours. And the highest-profile one at the
moment is Anthony Horowitz’s The House of
Silk, which has been billed as the first novel to get official approval
from the Arthur Conan Doyle estate. (But wasn’t Caleb Carr’s The Italian Secretary also approved by
the estate? They must be using the same PR people the Agatha Christie estate is
using to advertise Sophie Hannah’s continuation, apparently trying to wipe the
memory of Charles Osbourne from people’s minds…)
The
House of Silk sounds like a typical Holmes
pastiche, thanks to the cliché wording of the cover and (on one occasion) Dr.
Watson, which claims that the events could “unravel the very fabric of
society”. Which basically means Professor Moriarty is part of a world-wide
conspiracy to steal the Queen’s underpants during her Diamond Jubilee. Right?
Wrong! I was pleasantly surprised. The story begins as a typical Sherlock
Holmes adventure, but it slowly expands into an investigation of the titular
house of silk.
A Mr. Carstairs comes to Holmes for
help. He is being persecuted by a man in a flat cap. He suspects the man is a
notorious American gangster who blames him for the death of his twin brother.
Holmes, however, finds the revenge-bent gangster’s behaviour most peculiar— not
only does he avoid killing Carstairs when he has a perfect opportunity, he
makes an appointment for a private meeting and never shows up! Holmes takes the
job and sets the Baker Street Irregulars to work finding the mysterious
stranger. By chance, two of the boys run into him on the street and follow him
to his hotel. One of the boys, Ross, stays there and keeps watch. The other,
Wiggins, leaves to fetch Sherlock Holmes. When Holmes and Watson arrive, Ross
is absolutely terrified and runs off with his money the first chance he gets. Holmes
does find the stranger at the hotel—
stabbed in the neck... And then the case takes a supremely dark turn when Ross
goes missing. Before long, Holmes is tracking down the House of Silk— but there
seems to be no connection between these two cases!
The plot is solidly constructed and
paced. You move fluidly from one aspect of the adventure to another, and the
transition is seamless. It’s only when you reach the solution that you briefly
get a bumpy ride—the secret behind the House of Silk is a letdown, but Horowitz
redeems himself with his solution to the other half of the puzzle and the
connection between these two apparently unrelated halves.
Holmes solves the case in great style,
but the finale is a mixed bag. On the one hand, Holmes does have some great
moments of deduction, and the solution has its surprises. However, some of
Holmes’ conclusions are supremely obvious, and Dr. Watson manages to completely
overlook them. At times, it makes the poor man look positively laughable. I
wouldn’t have been surprised at times if, confronted by a machete-wielding
madman, Watson smiled approvingly and said “A most charming individual— he
clearly has nothing to do with this most ghastly affair.” Particularly bad are
the moments where Watson manages to overlook Obvious Villains No. 71 & No.
113 and when he fails to realize the trick behind an apparently-impossible
disappearance from a prison.
Now we get down to it: I am a fan of
Sherlock Holmes. I owe him a debt of gratitude at the very least— it was
through him that I discovered Golden Age mysteries. Since then, I’ve read many
books and I confess I haven’t memorized all the details of the Holmes canon. I
can’t tell you what Professor Moriarty’s birthdate is or what Holmes’ favourite
colour is. So I won’t be able to tell you if Anthony Horowitz has Holmes go to
a restaurant he wouldn’t have been caught dead in, or anything of the sort. However,
Horowitz does a splendid job bringing Sherlock Holmes to life. It is the same
genius, that same brilliant mind— he has some moments of apparent-clairvoyance
that are absolutely dazzling.
Dr. Watson is not as great, but he’s
done very well. It only helps that I relied heavily on an audiobook recording
that featured the brilliant voice of Derek Jacobi, who sounds like Nigel
Bruce’s Watson if he didn’t bumble around so much. These sound like the
original characters, apart from a few moments from Watson where he
philosophizes excessively about the state of the world he lives in. These
frankly seem out of place, but due to Jacobi’s brilliant reading, I did not
particularly notice. The only real problem with Watson is his surprising
stupidity at times.
There is one mathematical flaw in all
this. The book is treated as a manuscript of Dr. Watson’s, unreleased for 100
years. The year is given as 1890 and Watson refers to his writing this story
twenty-five years after the event, while war is raging in Europe. That places
it as written in 1915, during World War I. The scientist within me rebels—we
must have a time machine I know nothing about, because 100 years after 1915
does not equal 2011.
Apart from this, The House of Silk is a surprising success. I was somewhat sceptical
approaching it, but when I finished the book, I was satisfied. If Watson was a
little more intelligent (or at least less stupid), this could have been one of
the greatest Holmes pastiches of all-time. As it is, it’s merely a good read,
but there’s no shame in that. I recommend it to fellow fans of Sherlock Holmes,
especially Derek Jacobi’s brilliant reading.
Patrick Ohl ©2014
I personally found this a terrible book and found nothing in it that sounded even remotely like Conan Doyle stylistically or bearing the faintest resemblance to anything genuinely like Sherlock Holmes. I hated it even though my only other experience of Horowitz, FOYLE'S WAR, I thoroughly enjoyed. Different strokes.
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