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.
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