The Hound of the Baskervilles
Another Adventure of Sherlock Holmes, with "The Adventure of the Speckled Band"
  • Publication Date: January 10, 2006
  • ISBN: 9781551117225 / 1551117223
  • 300 pages; 5½" x 8½"

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The Hound of the Baskervilles

Another Adventure of Sherlock Holmes, with "The Adventure of the Speckled Band"

  • Publication Date: January 10, 2006
  • ISBN: 9781551117225 / 1551117223
  • 300 pages; 5½" x 8½"

The Hound of the Baskervilles (1901–02) is Arthur Conan Doyle’s most celebrated Sherlock Holmes adventure. At the end of the yew tree path of his ancestral home, Sir Charles Baskerville is found dead. Close by are the footprints of a gigantic hound. Called to investigate, Holmes seems to face a supernatural foe. In the tense narration of the detective’s efforts to solve the crime, Conan Doyle meditates on late Victorian and early twentieth-century ideas of ancestry and atavism, the possible biological determination of criminals, the stability of the British landed classes, and the place of the supernatural.

Historical documents included with this fully-annotated Broadview edition help contextualize the novel’s debates and reveal its cultural and literary significance as a supreme instance of early detective fiction. Also included is the Conan Doyle short story “The Adventure of the Speckled Band.”

Comments

“This superb edition outstrips all other editions of a popular classic. Francis O’Gorman’s introduction is impressive, placing the text in the context of numerous literary and cultural debates: about aristocracy, primitivism, biology and criminology, the supernatural, Empire, and spiritualism. His textual annotations offer the most thorough aid to understanding available. The edition’s supplementary materials are varied and offer numerous interpretative possibilities. The remarkable achievement of the edition, however, is the sheer enjoyment of the text it conveys, remembering always that the novel has the status of cultural myth because so many readers have found pleasure in it.” — Juliet John, University of Liverpool

“Two of the finest Sherlock Holmes chronicles, given in excellent text versions: this alone would invite ‘first choices’ labeling for this book. These two stories are no ‘mere’ thrillers, but fictions in which thrills are convincing because they draw close the natural and the (seeming) supernatural. O’Gorman’s ample, sensible introduction should convince readers that the way from Poe to late-Victorian science, atavism, and the decline of the English landed gentry is no far distance. This edition is a credit to Broadview, and that credit will doubtless have testimony through a long shelf life for the book.” — Benjamin Franklin Fisher, University of Mississippi

Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction
Arthur Conan Doyle: A Brief Chronology
A Note on the Text

The Hound of the Baskervilles: Another Adventure of Sherlock Holmes

“Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. VIII. The Adventure of the Speckled Band”

Appendix A: “Curiosities,” The Strand Magazine (April 1901)

Appendix B: From Francis Galton, “Composite Portraits” (1879)

Appendix C: From Francis Galton, Hereditary Genius (1892 ed.)

Appendix D: From Jack London, The People of the Abyss (1903)

Appendix E: Crime reporting from The Times (14 April 1901)

Appendix F: From Edgar Allan Poe, “The Murders in the Rue Morgue” (April 1841)

Appendix G: From Adam Badeau, “The Land,” Aristocracy in England (1886 ed.)

Appendix H: From Edward B.Tylor, “The Development of Culture,” Primitive Culture (1873 ed.)

Appendix I: From Arthur Conan Doyle, The New Revelation (1918)

Selected Further Reading and Filmography

Francis O’Gorman is a Reader in Victorian Literature at the University of Leeds. His books include Late Ruskin: New Contexts (2001), The Victorians and the Eighteenth Century: Reassessing the Tradition (2004; co-edited with Katherine Turner), and A Concise Companion to Victorian Fiction (2005).