Friday night found me in the movie theater, watching Avengers: Infinity War. I grew up with Marvel comics and the Infinity Gauntlet story happened when I was 11, so this movie had my money as soon as it was announced. After the movie was over, I could easily say that I loved it, although I had some questions.
So, this being a Sherlockian blog, you're probably waiting for me to talk about Downey, Cumberbatch and the amount of screen time their goatees spent together.
Yeah, that was fun. But when I woke up the next morning, I didn't find myself wanting to jump right back into the Marvel Cinematic Universe. I was ready for Baker Street. Infinity War was such a massive movie that I wanted to retreat to where the world's biggest villain could be a mathematics professor or a dog with phosphorous on its snout.
So I read this week's entry for The Irregular Canonical Book Club: Abbey Grange. This isn't one of the stories that most people would put on a Sherlockian Mount Rushmore, but I forgot how great of a story this is! Getting to see Holmes wrestle with himself and ultimately trusting his gut over his intellect is fantastic. And when he returns to the scene of the crime, Watson's description of Holmes' investigation is right up there with Boscombe Valley or Sign of Four.
So, although it may feel like there are 60 super heroes in Infinity War, I prefer to stick with the 60 canonical tales.
And.... point number two:
I WAS INTERVIEWED ON I HEAR OF SHERLOCK EVERYWHERE!!!!!!
Sorry, I couldn't start off this week's post with fanboy raving. But now you're in for it.
Oh man, I can't tell you how awesome it was! I've posted before about how IHOSE is my favorite podcast, so I was more than a little nervous about this. But there was no need for me to be. Hosts Scott Monty and Burt Wolder navigated me through the interview like the true pros that they are.
We covered my beginnings as a Sherlockian, scion societies in St. Louis, teaching Sherlock Holmes to my fifth graders, the upcoming Holmes in the Heartland conference, The Beacon Society, The Criminal Mastermind of Baker Street, and so much more. I would go back and listen to it again, but hearing my own voice on a recording is like nails on a chalkboard. I don't know how my students listen to that all day long!
But don't let my voice deter you. Check out IHOSE episode 142 and all of the other 141 episodes. I Hear of Sherlock is easily one of the most important Sherlockian products out there today, and it is perfect for anyone interested in our hobby.
Sunday, April 29, 2018
Sunday, April 15, 2018
All Good Comradeship and Friendship
In last week's post, I mentioned briefly that the planning committee for Holmes in the Heartland met to finalize our plans for the weekend.
Well, those plans are now online!
It was coincidental that the finalized plans went up on the same weekend that 221B Con was happening in Atlanta. But the excitement of putting our weekend out and getting to see so many Sherlockians having fun down south made me really appreciate this hobby.
If you look at the schedule for Holmes in the Heartland in the link above, you might notice we left the nights pretty open. There is a dinner on both Friday and Saturday, but they will end at a decent time so that you could either call it a night, or just be getting your night started.
Friday night's dinner will be a laid back affair at Sugarfire Smokehouse, after a tour next door at The National Blues Museum. The Blues Museum will have a live band playing that night, so it's set up perfectly for a hang out spot for Friday's participants.
Saturday's dinner will be at Favazza's, a popular Italian restaurant in The Hill neighborhood. We've booked a room for that night with bar service. The plan for that night is a standard convention dinner with some great food, but we also wanted to allow for socialization time on Saturday as well. So when dinner's over, the bar will stay open, and we will bust out some Sherlockian board games for anyone interested. Solve a mystery, or just hang out!
One of the members of the Holmes in the Heartland planning committee is also a regular 221B Con-goer, and she swears that the socialization is an important part of a Sherlockian convention. I've only been to two official Sherlockian events myself, Nerve and Knowledge in Indiana and Holmes, Doyle and Friends in Ohio. While the programming at both of those were excellent, what I wholeheartedly agree with her, as I really enjoyed was hanging out with other Sherlockians at those two events.
And that's what we are hoping for in August. I'm not promising the full on craziness of 221B Con in St. Louis on August 10-12, but I am promising some built in time for socializing. So drag some old friends with you, and get ready to meet some new ones. We're ready to meet you!
Well, those plans are now online!
It was coincidental that the finalized plans went up on the same weekend that 221B Con was happening in Atlanta. But the excitement of putting our weekend out and getting to see so many Sherlockians having fun down south made me really appreciate this hobby.
If you look at the schedule for Holmes in the Heartland in the link above, you might notice we left the nights pretty open. There is a dinner on both Friday and Saturday, but they will end at a decent time so that you could either call it a night, or just be getting your night started.
Friday night's dinner will be a laid back affair at Sugarfire Smokehouse, after a tour next door at The National Blues Museum. The Blues Museum will have a live band playing that night, so it's set up perfectly for a hang out spot for Friday's participants.
Saturday's dinner will be at Favazza's, a popular Italian restaurant in The Hill neighborhood. We've booked a room for that night with bar service. The plan for that night is a standard convention dinner with some great food, but we also wanted to allow for socialization time on Saturday as well. So when dinner's over, the bar will stay open, and we will bust out some Sherlockian board games for anyone interested. Solve a mystery, or just hang out!
One of the members of the Holmes in the Heartland planning committee is also a regular 221B Con-goer, and she swears that the socialization is an important part of a Sherlockian convention. I've only been to two official Sherlockian events myself, Nerve and Knowledge in Indiana and Holmes, Doyle and Friends in Ohio. While the programming at both of those were excellent, what I wholeheartedly agree with her, as I really enjoyed was hanging out with other Sherlockians at those two events.
And that's what we are hoping for in August. I'm not promising the full on craziness of 221B Con in St. Louis on August 10-12, but I am promising some built in time for socializing. So drag some old friends with you, and get ready to meet some new ones. We're ready to meet you!
Sunday, April 8, 2018
I Am A Sherlockian
Well, if you've been around Sherlockian social media over the past few days, I think you know what this week's blog will be about:
Who is and who isn't a Sherlockian.
The debate started when one Sherlockian said she didn't think people could call themselves fans of Sherlock Holmes if they hadn't read the Canon. [Edit: As pointed out in the comments, it actually started from a comment in a Facebook group and the above Sherlockian shared her opinion] As you can imagine, many people social media handled the view of someone who disagrees with them in a mature and pleasant matter.
Just kidding. Lots of people over-reacted.
But this opinion did open up a dialogue with some good points on both sides and led to the beautiful #IAmASherlockian hashtag on Twitter.
One prominent Sherlockian has said a few times that the philatelic society is not going to be very tolerant of people who show up and insist on talking about milk bottle tops. After I looked up what 'philatelic' meant (stamp collecting), the analogy made more sense if you are describing a typical Sherlockian society.
(Quick side note: last time I waded into these waters about societies, all Sherlockian societies were lumped together, and the Baker Street Irregulars were seen as a governing body of local clubs. That is not the case and I only speak for MY view on Sherlockian clubs.)
Sherlockian societies are literary societies that typically talk about a different canonical story at each meeting. If you are a member of such a group, I firmly believe that you should be familiar with the story being discussed at that group's meeting. It may be the very first canonical story you've ever read, or you're reading it for the umpteenth time for the meeting, but to be part of a group carries certain expectations.
I say, if you are willing to participate in what the group is doing, come on in! For those of you just starting out, The John H. Watson Society shared a great sentiment from Joy Clarkson that I feel all Sherlockians should have:
And if reading the stories isn't your thing, then a traditional Sherlockian society probably isn't for you. My hobby is reading Sherlock Holmes stories written by Arthur Conan Doyle. If your hobby is fan fiction, Granada tweetalongs, or pastiche, I'm happy we have tangential interests. We are all interested in an imaginary character and his imaginary best friend solving imaginary crimes. Let's all take a step back and stop taking things so seriously!
A rule of thumb I try to live by has always been, don't be a dick. If you and I aren't interested in the same thing, that doesn't allow you to dismiss me or me to dismiss you. You call yourself what you want, and I will call myself what I want. Quite frankly, I don't really care what other people call themselves; it doesn't have a big impact on my life.
Wow, I'm getting awfully preachy here. In case you are wondering, other good rules to live by include:
Crying is acceptable at funerals and the Grand Canyon.
No home is complete without a proper toolbox.
There has never been a sadness that can't be cured by breakfast food.
This morning, I met with four other local Sherlockians today to finalize plans for Holmes in the Heartland. All five of us came to the Canon from different entry points and have been there for varying amounts of time. As I looked around the table, I was thankful to be spending time with such great folks. I'm sure some of us disagree on plenty outside of the world of Sherlockiana, and probably some within it. Does it matter if they prefer Cumberbatch to Paget or Brett to fan fiction? Nope, they're good people and a true benefit to our Sherlockian hobby.
Ashley Polasek summed things up perfectly yesterday, so I'm going to end this week's post with her very wise words:
I don’t usually wade into Sherlockian skirmishes. But the current furor relates to subjects at the heart of my many years of scholarship, so, for what it’s worth, here is why, when it comes to defining the label “Sherlockian”, I am, to coin a term, “Sherlockumenical”.
There is only one Sherlock Holmes: all of them. I emerged as a Sherlockian after fevered consumption of the complete Canon, moving hungrily into adaptations immediately after. I have a terminal degree in the study of... the adaptations. My research systematically builds the argument that iterations of the Holmes character are contextual reinterpretations of a source work, making them all part of a coherent, readable whole. Every part is a component of that ever-expanding, ever-more complex whole.
If you call yourself a Sherlockian—a word that is, itself, defined by the non-essentialist contextualization of a reader to a text—but deny the function of adaptive contextualization to the definition of that text, you are fundamentally misunderstanding literary studies, adaptation studies, and participatory culture studies.
In short, there is not a real Holmes and a series of other, lesser, secondary versions. There is only one Holmes. It encompasses and, indeed, supports broad, mutating, evolving, even mutually exclusive readings.
If you are a fan of one or more of those readings, you are a Sherlockian.
And if you understand this, you, too, are Sherlockumenical.
Congratulations.
Who is and who isn't a Sherlockian.
The debate started when one Sherlockian said she didn't think people could call themselves fans of Sherlock Holmes if they hadn't read the Canon. [Edit: As pointed out in the comments, it actually started from a comment in a Facebook group and the above Sherlockian shared her opinion] As you can imagine, many people social media handled the view of someone who disagrees with them in a mature and pleasant matter.
Just kidding. Lots of people over-reacted.
But this opinion did open up a dialogue with some good points on both sides and led to the beautiful #IAmASherlockian hashtag on Twitter.
One prominent Sherlockian has said a few times that the philatelic society is not going to be very tolerant of people who show up and insist on talking about milk bottle tops. After I looked up what 'philatelic' meant (stamp collecting), the analogy made more sense if you are describing a typical Sherlockian society.
(Quick side note: last time I waded into these waters about societies, all Sherlockian societies were lumped together, and the Baker Street Irregulars were seen as a governing body of local clubs. That is not the case and I only speak for MY view on Sherlockian clubs.)
Sherlockian societies are literary societies that typically talk about a different canonical story at each meeting. If you are a member of such a group, I firmly believe that you should be familiar with the story being discussed at that group's meeting. It may be the very first canonical story you've ever read, or you're reading it for the umpteenth time for the meeting, but to be part of a group carries certain expectations.
I say, if you are willing to participate in what the group is doing, come on in! For those of you just starting out, The John H. Watson Society shared a great sentiment from Joy Clarkson that I feel all Sherlockians should have:
And if reading the stories isn't your thing, then a traditional Sherlockian society probably isn't for you. My hobby is reading Sherlock Holmes stories written by Arthur Conan Doyle. If your hobby is fan fiction, Granada tweetalongs, or pastiche, I'm happy we have tangential interests. We are all interested in an imaginary character and his imaginary best friend solving imaginary crimes. Let's all take a step back and stop taking things so seriously!
A rule of thumb I try to live by has always been, don't be a dick. If you and I aren't interested in the same thing, that doesn't allow you to dismiss me or me to dismiss you. You call yourself what you want, and I will call myself what I want. Quite frankly, I don't really care what other people call themselves; it doesn't have a big impact on my life.
Wow, I'm getting awfully preachy here. In case you are wondering, other good rules to live by include:
Crying is acceptable at funerals and the Grand Canyon.
No home is complete without a proper toolbox.
There has never been a sadness that can't be cured by breakfast food.
This morning, I met with four other local Sherlockians today to finalize plans for Holmes in the Heartland. All five of us came to the Canon from different entry points and have been there for varying amounts of time. As I looked around the table, I was thankful to be spending time with such great folks. I'm sure some of us disagree on plenty outside of the world of Sherlockiana, and probably some within it. Does it matter if they prefer Cumberbatch to Paget or Brett to fan fiction? Nope, they're good people and a true benefit to our Sherlockian hobby.
Ashley Polasek summed things up perfectly yesterday, so I'm going to end this week's post with her very wise words:
I don’t usually wade into Sherlockian skirmishes. But the current furor relates to subjects at the heart of my many years of scholarship, so, for what it’s worth, here is why, when it comes to defining the label “Sherlockian”, I am, to coin a term, “Sherlockumenical”.
There is only one Sherlock Holmes: all of them. I emerged as a Sherlockian after fevered consumption of the complete Canon, moving hungrily into adaptations immediately after. I have a terminal degree in the study of... the adaptations. My research systematically builds the argument that iterations of the Holmes character are contextual reinterpretations of a source work, making them all part of a coherent, readable whole. Every part is a component of that ever-expanding, ever-more complex whole.
If you call yourself a Sherlockian—a word that is, itself, defined by the non-essentialist contextualization of a reader to a text—but deny the function of adaptive contextualization to the definition of that text, you are fundamentally misunderstanding literary studies, adaptation studies, and participatory culture studies.
In short, there is not a real Holmes and a series of other, lesser, secondary versions. There is only one Holmes. It encompasses and, indeed, supports broad, mutating, evolving, even mutually exclusive readings.
If you are a fan of one or more of those readings, you are a Sherlockian.
And if you understand this, you, too, are Sherlockumenical.
Congratulations.
Sunday, April 1, 2018
Interesting Interviews: Brad Keefauver
This month's Interesting Interview is Brad Keefauver, a name familiar to any Sherlockian that's been around for any amount of time. Brad has been blogging about all things Sherlockian (and whatever non-Sherlockian things he can twist to become Sherlockian) on his site, Sherlock Peoria for about as long as the internet has been around.
Throughout the nineties, Brad was writing books and publishing journals that are chock full of goodness. More recently, he has started a new podcast, "Sherlock Holmes is Real," which is a new and inventive take on the history of Sherlock Holmes' place in the world. The second season of Sherlock Holmes is Real started in March and is well worth checking out.
How do you define the word “Sherlockian”?
Someone who loves Sherlock Holmes. And, I suppose, we must be polite and allow that they self-identify as a Sherlockian, just in case they’re a Holmesian, Sherlockholmesian, Watsonian, or “just someone who loves Sherlock Holmes.”
How did you become a Sherlockian?
I saw Sherlock Holmes in a rowboat trying to fight the Loch Ness monster. I was in junior high and only saw the preview to The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes without getting to see the actual movie for years. The spark was struck in that moment.
What is your favorite canonical story?
“The Illustrious Client.” Can’t even say why.
What subset of Sherlockiana really interests you?
The things Watson doesn’t tell us, but are there all the same. The “here is what really happened” genre of Sherlockian scholarship, extrapolating from the evidence we’re given. When done right, you always get a “Why didn’t I see that before?” moment.
What things do you like to research related to Sherlock Holmes?
Historical nooks and crannies. Timelines. Single moments where something was happening to Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson while other things were happening elsewhere in the world at exactly that point in time. (Haven’t actually done that last one yet, but it’s on my list. And, actually, Vincent W. Wright would be better at it than me.)
What is one of your favorite posts or topics you've ever covered on Sherlock Peoria?
My favorite posts are always the ones where I get to express something that someone else can’t come out and say or is having a hard time finding words for. There are some topics in Sherlockian culture that we rarely communicate about in print, and I enjoy getting them on the public record. The most gratifying moment in blogging is when someone else tells you that you expressed what they had always thought perfectly. It’s like you got an instant of telepathy in a way, and a good contact with one other person is the best thing in life, really.
How would you describe "Sherlock Holmes is Real" to someone who's never heard it before?
“Sherlock Holmes is Real” is a fictional investigation into Sherlockian history without quality control or standards, with a kind of Mulder and Scully set of hosts, and episodes that can pack a lot of confusing detail into less than twenty minutes. Kind a a next level of “playing the game” that hasn’t quite figured itself out yet. And will hopefully improve as it does figure itself out.
Where did your inspiration come from for a conspiracy theory based podcast?
I had spent a year trying to figure out what kind of podcast I’d enjoy doing, and the I listened to “The Black Tapes” podcast. Their style of ongoing investigation into a supernatural world seemed like something that could work with my imaginary view of the Sherlockian world as a place of conspiracies and secret connections. The real facts out there don’t take much of a push to seem like over-imaginative fiction sometimes.
What Sherlockian things do you like to read other than the Canon?
A really good novel with a Sherlock Holmes tie-in. It’s so hard to find Sherlock done well, so it seems like the most enjoyable things are the almost-Sherlocks. The last three I enjoyed featured female leads: a client, a sister, and a great-great-great-grand- daughter, so I think the gender-shift shakes me out of comparing it to Doyle enough to relax and enjoy it. If a novel tries to say “This is the real Sherlock Holmes!” then it has to match the mental image of Holmes I’ve built over decades, and at this point, that’s an extremely hard task. BBC Sherlock fan fiction hits the mark more often than Doyle-based pastiche for me due to that.
Where do you see Sherlockiana in 5 or 10 years from now?
We’re going to see a lot of talented writers who cut their teeth with on-line prose entering the commercial markets, many of them with new Sherlock Holmes stories to tell. We’re going to see more variations on Sherlock Holmes across all media, too, as those little seeds called “AUs” grow out into the mainstream. The things we see in the years ahead aren’t going to come from the Sherlockian venues who like matters exactly the way they are. They’re going to come from directions we weren’t expecting at all. And Sherlockiana will be playing off those new ideas, both groaning and exalting in the new, as we always do. Oh, yes . . . and the women are going to finish taking over. Maybe not in five or ten years, but it’s coming. (Except in St. Louis, of course, when a fairly young fellow is doing a fine job, and will hopefully continue on with that.)
(Editor's note: It seems like Keefauver's set the bar fairly low for the St. Louis Sherlockians, but I'll take the compliment nonetheless.)