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Mystery Fiction

The Whodunit
Invented by Edgar Allan Poe (1809-1849)
Elements of Mystery Fiction /
Detective Stories
Creepy Settings
Forests or desolate
natural places
Dark places or night-
time
atmospheres
Run-down buildings
Elements of Mystery Fiction /
Detective Stories
Mysterious Characters
Super detectives as
protagonistscan
solve crimes the
police cant
Detectives friend often
serves as narrator
Criminals as
antagonists
Elements of Mystery Fiction /
Detective Stories
Suspenseful Plots
Crime is committed (usually murder)
Suspects are identified and investigated
Expert detective examines evidence,
deduces solution
Solution is revealed to the characters
and reader
Elements of Mystery Fiction /
Detective Stories
Specialized Themes
Good will triumph over evil.
The truth will always come
out.
People get their just rewards.
Crime doesnt pay.
Even the smallest detail is
important.
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Born 1859 in Scotland
Studied Medicine and became
a doctor in 1885
Began writing in 1887, A
Study in Scarlet 1st Sherlock
Holmes story
Wrote dozens of Sherlock
Holmes stories for the Strand
magazine
Killed off Sherlock Holmes in
1893 because he was tired of
writing that kind of fiction
Brought Holmes back ten
years later due to fan outrage
Knighted in 1902 by Edward
VII
Works of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Sherlock Holmes Fiction Other Works
A Study in Scarlet (1887) Fiction
The Sign of Four (1890) The White Company (1891)
Adventures of Sherlock Holmes The Great Shadow (1892)
(1892)
The Lost World (1912)
Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes
The Poison Belt (1913)
(1893)
The Hound of the Baskervilles
(1902) Non-Fiction
Return of Sherlock Holmes (1905) The Great Boer War (1900)
The Valley of Fear (1915) The War in South Africa: Its
His Last Bow: Some Reminiscences Cause and Conduct (1902)
of Sherlock Holmes (1917) The British Campaign in France
Case-book of Sherlock Holmes and Flanders (1916-1920)
(1927)
Sherlock Holmes

Amateur Detective
Based on Dr. Joseph Bell
Solves crimes by using
deductionlooks at clues
Knowledgeable in Chemistry,
Botany (poisons), Criminal
cases, Anatomy
Can tell where people are
from and what their
occupation is by looking at
them
Sherlock Holmes

Plays the violin badly


Smokes pipe & at times, opium
When goes out wears a
deerstalking cap and cape
Partner is Dr. Watson, also
believed to be a real person
Chief antagonist is Dr. Moriarty
Avoids romantic attachments
Excerpt from A Study in Scarlet
Website

http://www.sherlock-holmes.co
.uk/
The Hound of the
Baskervilles
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Terms
Clueanything that serves to guide or
direct in the solution of a problem,
mystery, etc
Red Herringsomething that diverts
attention from the actual facts of a
case; a misleading clue
Motivereasons to commit the crime
Meansresources to commit the crime
Opportunitychances to commit the
crime
The Hound of the Baskervilles:
anatomy of a best-seller
It combines a detective novel with a horror story, bounding along with a
ferocious beast, an escaped convict, a villain, even a damsel in distress.
It contrasts reality with the supernatural, pitting good against the forces of
evil
The story was conceived in April 1901 while Conan Doyle was on a golfing
holiday with his friend Robinson in Dartmoor.
It combines a savage dog stalking the
It was based on an ancient folk tale concerning
countryside. Robinsons family home was on the southern edge of Dartmoor,
where legends involving black dogs abound, and so one of english literatures
classic stories was born, with a demon beast seemingly pursuing a personal
vendetta against successive owners of Baskerville Hall.
Dartmoor was a wild, primitive, prehistoric landscape where thick
mist descended. There was even a rocky granite outcrop named
Hound Tor, all perfect material for a tale involving a vast and
mysterious place.
The story speeds up towards a dramatic climax with Watsons vivid
account of the appearance of the hound in pursuit of Sir Henry
Baskerville.

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