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Conversations with Arthur Conan Doyle - In His Own Words (Paperback)
Loot Price: R321
Discovery Miles 3 210
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Conversations with Arthur Conan Doyle - In His Own Words (Paperback)
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Loot Price R321
Discovery Miles 3 210
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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At the end of the 19th century, perhaps every man wanted to be
Arthur Conan Doyle. He had written historical novels, short stories
of horror and the supernatural; and displayed huge energy and
talent in a variety of fields. He was a fine cricketer (he once
took the wicket of the great WC Grace); played football, rugby and
golf. He practiced as a doctor; campaigned for underdogs,
introduced skis to Switzerland; and knew both Harry Houdini and
Oscar Wilde. He was an adventurer, a controversialist, war reporter
and knight of the realm. But most famously of all, he had created
Sherlock Holmes, the world's most famous detective - based on his
former medical professor, Joseph Bell. All in all, Doyle was a
Boy's Own dream. Yet for Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, all such
achievements paled into significance when set against his
commitment to spiritualism. Although interested in the subject for
many years, he publicly converted to the cause around time of the
First World War - much to many people's amazement: 'Sir Arthur
Conan Doyle has many striking characteristics,' wrote Ruth Brandon.
'He is gigantically tall and strong. He is a gifted story teller.
He is a man of strong opinions and considerable political
influence. But perhaps the most extraordinary thing about him is
the combination of all the attributes of worldly success with an
almost child-like literalness and credulity of mind, manifested
particularly in relation to spiritualism.' 'Conversations with
Conan Doyle' is an imagined conversation with this remarkable
figure. But while the conversation is imagined, Doyle's words are
not; they are all authentically his. 'For many, Conan Doyle's
commitment to spiritualism is an embarrassing aberration,' says
Simon Parke. 'They want him to go back and just be the creator of
Sherlock Holmes. But people don't fit into boxes, and Doyle
certainly doesn't! So I want people to meet the man, hear him speak
- and then make up their own minds. He's often passionate; but
never dull.'
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