Quintessential Doyle
Madhumita Chakraborty
The Case Of Lady Sannox: Medical Mysteries And Other Adventures by By Arthur Conan Doyle Speaking Tiger, New Delhi, 2016, 231 pp., 250.00
May 2017, volume 41, No 5

You think of Arthur Conan Doyle, and the name that immediately comes to mind is that of the iconic Baker Street detective Sherlock Holmes. For lovers of crime fiction and Holmes, Baker Street is on the bucket list during any trip to London. Even today, Sherlock remains the most popular and iconic detective of all times, comparable perhaps only to Poirot, with a canon that has enthralled generation after generation of crime fiction lovers.

However, like Christie who apart from Poirot, Miss Marple or even Tommy and Tuppence also wrote a number of stories not involving any of them, this collection of Doyle is interesting for not using Holmes as the detective. Sixteen out of Doyle’s total number of 56 short stories are included in the collection, and many of which are significant as Doyle, who was qualified as a doctor makes use of his medical knowledge in a number of them. The second aspect that one notices is the dominance of reason over emotion in many of the stories. Whether it is the opening story ‘The Physiologist’s Wife’ or ‘The Sealed Room’, Doyle’s own vision as a rationalist are evident. Also, everything in the stories is constructed in such a manner so as to be believable, and explicable at the level of reality—as Jerry Pinto writes in his Introduction to the collection, ‘particularly that which seemed to first belong to the realm of the supernatural, the hellish, the horrible: the blanched face at the window in the middle of the night, the dead man in a closed room…, the curious incident of the dog at night time’ (Introduction, p. vii).

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