Saturday, June 4, 2016

A New Voice for Sherlock Holmes


Sherlock Holmes - The Golden Years will soon be available as an audiobook. A great new voice talent, Richard Di Britannia, has brought his amazing skills to bear. He not only produces one of the best “Holmes voices” I have ever heard, but shows his range and versatility as he interprets over 70 characters in the book.

Below is a sample taken from the first story in the collection -- A Bonnie Bag of Bones:

In this saga, the infamous duo is led on a not-so-merry chase into the mythical mountains of Scotland, and ultimately to the “the woman” who is tangled within a mystery that has haunted Holmes for a quarter century.

In the clip below, Watson has just arrived at Holmes’s retirement cottage in Sussex Downs after receiving a terse telegram from Holmes that chided him for a recent mythological story he published about a creature call the Grey Man of Ben Macdhui.

CLICK on the screen above to hear Richard Di Britiannia interpretation of Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson in a post-retirement conversation.

As soon as the 10-1/2 hour audiobook is out, information and links will be posted. If you are interested in a hard copy version of this collection of stories, you can buy it on AMAZON and most other bookstores.

Sunday, May 22, 2016

Sherlock Conversations Interview with Author of Sherlock Holmes- The Golden Years (Me!)


Sherlock Conversations, the great new blog that covers the world of Sherlock Holmes, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, just posted an interview I did with Don Smith - the blogs author.

Don asked some great questions that really helped me to focus on what makes Sherlock Holmes - The Golden Years so unique. One example:

QUESTION: You are going in a unique direction with your books. As opposed to him in his 90s or him younger, you are putting him middle aged. So is Sherlock in his 60s and 70s here?

KIM KRISCO: In Sherlock Holmes–The Golden Years, Holmes is just turning 60. By today’s standards, he was not that old, but life expectancy one hundred years ago was about 55 years. One of the things we all love about Sherlock Holmes is that, in a constantly changing world, he is one unchanging constant. However, being human, we know that Holmes likely changed, in small and big ways, after sixty years of life experience. As a writer, it was an interesting challenge to explore how the world’s greatest detective may have grown and evolved as he matured. Keeping the personality and wit we all love in mind, I think I did a fair job of capturing Holmes’s changes.

Check out Sherlock Conversations and the rest of the interview . . . and buy it on Amazon and other great bookstores.

Sunday, May 1, 2016

PLEASE Give Me Your Opinion


I had a goal to have, at least fifty reviews of Sherlock Holmes - The Golden Years by my birthday (just a few days away now). I am very pleased with the reviews I have received, but they total only 39. I know, from the sales, that there are hundreds of people who have purchased my book (Thank You), but have not posted a review.
PLEASE - if you have read my book, please take a few minutes to give your review on Amazon.

Thursday, April 14, 2016

A New Sherlock Holmes Adventure Begins


As noted in the previous post, I have begun a new book. This one, more or less, continues where Sherlock Holmes - The Golden Years left off. It’s after the war. Holmes’s bucolic retirement is, once again, interrupted with a curious invitation. It begins like this . . .

*  *  *

HOLMES WATCHED from the window for some time as the messenger hoisted himself upon the pedals and pedaled his bicycle up the road. Not until his visitor had vanished in the haze did Holmes turn his gaze upon the envelope. He ran his index finger around the edges, and finally across the raised ink letters on the back flap—R. A. P. His eyes flashed upward.
Then, after an almost imperceptible intake of breath, he murmured, “Royal Academy of Photography. H’m.”
Curiosity is the wick on the candle that lights the way to adventure. Once, it was Holmes’s constant companion. He anxiously tugged at the envelope, pulling it open to reveal an engraved invitation:

Photographer T. S. Fields
invites you to the debut of his collection:
Irregular Lives

Saturday, March 15, 1919
35, Russell Square, London

A small note was enclosed in the envelope as well. He read it:

The lives of the well-off have an arc, with significant achievements near the peak. The lives of the deprived hover barely off the ground. Their accomplishment lies at the bitter end—the fact that they survived at all.
Your life, Mr. Holmes, has a broad elevated sweep. And, as you reflect upon your journey, know that, with thanks to you and my mates, I was able to find a footing on clean pavement.
Please help me honour, and eulogize, those that served us both so well.
T.S..F.

A wave of recollections, of people, places, faces and voices from the past, swept over Holmes like a tidal wave: his many encounters with the band of juveniles whom he had named “the Baker-street Irregulars.” 

The true story of Holmes and the irregulars was never told, largely because they were on the scene primarily when Watson was not. As you can see, I know how this story begins, but not how it ends. So, if you have any ideas, please send them my way.
Thanks for following me.

Thursday, March 31, 2016

The Untold Story of the Irregulars and Sherlock Holmes


THE IRREGULARS were like many children in turn-of-the-century London is some ways, and different in other ways. It seems likely that their association with Sherlock Holmes, and the money they received from helping him, would give them a little advantage over most of the street urchins at that time.

Like most slum-dogs in London, the irregulars had to work instead of going to school. Some had their own professions such as chimney-sweeps, shoe-blacks, mudlarks, and the like. Such is the case with many of the irregular characters that I am creating for my next book. However, even with the help of Sherlock Holmes, the irregulars lived in the same stark environment as most poor children in the period.

The streets, particularly the slums, were disease-ridden because sanitation was bad and clean water unavailable. Many children died from illnesses such as cholera, measles, diarrhea, and tuberculosis. Of course, parents died as well, leaving many orphans. There were few orphanages for the poor. Workhouses were the only option for poorer orphans. Workhouses provided food and shelter in return for hard, unpleasant work. Conditions were so harsh that children would only go to workhouses as a last resort.

The irregulars were a band of street kids who worked together to avoid the workhouses. Many of them walked on the wrong side of the law, out of necessity. They banded together to avoid what were called the “lads-men,” of Dickens fame, who provided meager shelter and food in exchange for the lion’s share of the spoils from thievery. Despite this, it was likely that many of the irregulars were thieves. However, it is nice to think that, thanks to Sherlock Holmes, they had other ways to make a living -- other choices. This is the underlying premise of my new book tentatively entitled: Irregular Lives: The True Story of Sherlock Holmes’s Urchin Army.

As a writer, I find the irregulars fascinating because they provide a stark counterpoint to the richer society that is the focus of most of Doyle’s stories. Indeed, I recently published a story called Blood Brothers for the new multi-volume anthology of Sherlock Holmes stories being created to support the The Undershaw Trust’s efforts to save the Doyle home in Surrey. My story is in Volume III of The MX Book of New Sherlock Holmes Stories.

I will soon begin postong portions of the current work in progress in this blog. I invite readers, and followers, to offer opinions, ideas, and criticism. I am curious if this new focus for Sherlock Holmes stories -- the irregulars -- is something you, as a reader, might enjoy.  I hope to hear from you.

Sunday, March 13, 2016

The Next Sherlock Holmes Movie . . . Hopefully!


Sherlock Holmes is obviously not new the cinematic screen. The first Sherlock Holmes movie was made in 1905. Thereafter, there have been many movies starring actors like Harry Saintsbury, Eille Norwood, John Barrymore and, of course, Basil Rathbone. Recently, Ian McKellen in Mr. Holmes, “put the cheery on the cake for me.

The public cannot get enough of Sherlock Holmes who is officially now the most portrayed fictional character in history.

My latest offering, Sherlock Holmes – The Golden Years, is one of many on the bookshelf. However, I am planning to get my stories off the shelf and onto the silver screen. I have just finished a screenplay based on one of the stories in my collection and made it available via a website called Ink Tip-- a place studios, actors and directors go to find new material.

The script is tentatively entitled: Sherlock Holmes and the Kongo Nkisi Spirit Train. The action-packed story takes place around one of the most remarkable real life engineering projects ever conceived -- the Cape to Cairo Railway which stretched over 5,700 miles from Cape Town South Africa to Cairo Egypt. This turn of the century project faced, and overcome, many obstacles over the last 150 years—swamps, impenetrable jungle, the ravages of the white ants and termites, encounters with lions, elephants and other beasts, disease, and regional wars, to name a few. However, one of the most terrifying obstacles was the Kongo Nkisi  spirit.

In my movie, Sherlock Holmes and the Kongo Nkisi Spirit Train, Sherlock Holmes travels deep into the forbidding jungle of central Africa to unravel a mystery that puts him among the walking dead.

The walls of Sherlock Holmes’s rational world crumble as an African witch, acting as an agent of illegal mining operation in the Belgian Congo, sets out to steal his soul. The spirit of “the woman” he loved intervenes, to try and save him. Sherlock Holmes does solve another mystery, but he is left to reconcile his ultra-rational world with his mystical experience.

So, tell all your friends in Hollywood about Sherlock Holmes and the Kongo Nkisi Spirit Train. And, in the meanwhile, check out the other 4 stories in my printed collection on Amazon.

Thursday, March 3, 2016

Sherlock Holmes and Dr. John Watson: The Consummate odd-couple


All, but four, of the Sherlock Holmes tales are narrated by Watson. But, the character Watson not only serves as a chronicler, but also as a story telling device. Watson often makes his own observations and offers his own theories, which throw the reader off track a bit, and thus make Holmes’s deductions and solutions all the more surprising.


If you have enjoyed any of the many Sherlock Holmes movies and television programs, you may have noticed that writers and actors interpret the character of John Watson in wide-ranging ways. In some adaptations, Watson is a bumbling fool, in others he is a wise and invaluable ally. So, two of the most important decisions I had to make, as I was writing a new collection of Holmes pastiches, were:

“What kind of man was Dr. John Watson?
And, “What was the nature of Sherlock’s and John’s relationship?

To some extent, I drew upon my own experience, as an older man, with long-time male friends. What kind of relationship do I have with some of my better male friends?

You will be able to see how I answered that question in my new collection of Holmes adventures – Sherlock Holmes – The Golden Years.  One of the stories in this collection, The Kongo Nkisi Spirit Train, a character (Jameson) chats with Dr. Watson about what he sees as the role Watson plays in Holmes’s life and work. Watson says about his relationship with Holmes:

          "I am a mere acolyte.”
         Jameson held a glint in his eye. “I know better, John. You do what any good colleague does, and provide something that Mr. Holmes needs, even if he may not fully comprehend it.”
          “I cannot imagine what that would be.”
         “Certainly, a shared journey is richer, and more meaningful. You make that richness available to one another. But also, much of Mr. Holmes’s life is lived within his lofty intellect. You provide the tether that ties him to humanity, and grounds him in the world.”
            “I had never thought of our relationship in that particular manner.”
        “What is more, Mr. Holmes is a craftsman, an artisan. His craft is unique; but, like all craftsmen, his work must be seen and appreciated. As the master storyteller, you display his craft to the world.”
        “Mr. Jameson . . . Lanner . . . your sagacity and discernment are much appreciated. You hold up a mirror into which I seldom peer. Thank you.”

This and the other five new tales in this collection take place when Holmes and Watson are “retired” – 1912 to 1913. I felt it was important to show how their relationship had evolved, mellowed, and become deeper and richer in the decade following their supposed retirement in 1903.

I hope that my humble interpretation of their relationship contributes to their longevity as one of the most famous male duos in history alongside Laurel and Hardy, Cheech and Chong, and Han Solo and Chewbacca.

The book Sherlock Holmes – The Golden Years is AVAILABLE ON AMAZON and most on-line and main-street bookstores.

http://www.amazon.com/Sherlock-Holmes-Golden-Years-Post-Retirement/dp/1780926715