“You Have Visited Japan”: A Modern Take on Sherlock Holmes from Fuji TV

Last fall, Japanese network Fuji TV aired a new series called Sherlock: Untold Stories, aka Sharokku. Set in modern-day Tokyo, it features the detective Shishio Homare, who is assisted by Junichi Wakamiya, who, in an interesting twist on the formula, is a psychiatrist.

The protagonists are quite young, and it definitely feels as though its vibe is closer to BBC Sherlock than to other Holmes adaptations. Unfortunately, only two of the 11 episodes have thus far been given English subtitles, but with all the time you have now, you can learn Japanese, right?

I can’t vouch for the show, as I haven’t watched either episode yet, but it seems to be getting very positive ratings on sites catering to fans of Japanese TV.

You can watch all of the episodes, including the two with subtitles, here. Fuji has released an English-subbed trailer, so perhaps they plan to produce a version with full subtitles. We can only hope. I’ve included that trailer here; take a look, and see if it interests you.

“Keep Your Distance and All Is Well”: The Sherlock Holmes COVID-19 Survival Guide

From the talented Mark Chellew, President of the Sherlock Holmes Society of South Australia, we present the Master’s guide to surviving the pandemic. We very much hope you’ll take his recommendations to heart.

(Many thanks to MX Publishing for sharing this.)

The Shocking Case of the Unknown Sherlock Holmes

Today we’ve found something truly obscure to share with you: A profile of the Master that ran in the Times of London on April 1, 1980, headlined just as this post is titled. The intriguing, and frequently unflattering, revelations in the piece were drawn from the papers of Dr. Moore Agar, Holmes’s personal physician for many years. (In “The Devil’s Foot,” when Dr. Watson mentioned Agar, he included the tantalizing note, “whose dramatic introduction to Holmes I may some day recount.” Unfortunately, if he ever wrote it up, he chose not to publish it.)

Dr. Agar agreed with other scholars of Holmes’s cases—such as Mr. Nicholas Meyer—that Professor Moriarty was merely a fantasy conjured up by the great detective’s imagination. The article contains many convincing details, but the failure of any further information to emerge from the doctor’s papers in the last 40 years is puzzling. Perhaps greater scholarly minds than we will be able to confirm or debunk the account.

Agar was sympathetic to a fellow medical man, writing, “Poor old Watson! He did his best to help Holmes and merely succeeded in making himself look foolish. There’s friendship for you.”

The article can be found only as a JPEG image in the Times’s archives (there is an option to view its text, but the results of the OCR scan seem to have been victimized by someone who wished, perhaps, to protect the memory of the Master). We present it here so that you may download it, enlarge the image, and peruse it at your leisure.

The Shocking Case of the Unknown Sherlock Holmes, a profile from the April 1, 1980, issue of the Times of London
Page 17 of the April 1, 1980 issue of the Times

“I Have My Eye on a Suite in Baker Street”: Tour the Sherlock Holmes Museum from Your Shelter

A singular addition to our post the other day about virtual tours of museums to enliven your confinement! Our friends at MX Publishing have dug up a video tour of the Sherlock Holmes Museum at 221B Baker St., N.W., London.

“Then he opened a door and showed us into a large room furnished as a museum.” [PRIO]

Please note that MX is running a #bookstotrees promotion, planting a tree for every book purchased from their site in 2020. They’ve planted 272 trees at the time of this post, with a goal of 1,000+ for the year. You need some more Sherlockiana to read while you’re sheltering, right?

IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT FROM GRAND GANDER PATRICK EWING

Hello friends,

In case you are wondering and after due consideration, I have decided to suspend future meetings of NMSOBC. I feel that until we know more about this situation with COVID 19 and in the interest of our members well being that it is better to be safe than sorry. Our April hosts are self isolating and a non starter public meeting for Reichenbach helped in making this decision. Hopefully, we will know more by June and can reconsider. I welcome any comments or questions.

Thank you and stay healthy.

Yours in Holmes,

Patrick