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More parodies have been written targeting Sherlock Holmes than
anyone else dead or alive, fictional or real. James M. Barrie, the
author of Peter Pan, started it all back in the early 1890's and
Sherlockian parody has been coming out regularly ever since, right
into the age of the internet. While Sherlock's creator Sir Arthur
Conan Doyle lived, close to 400 appeared in Britain and America. In
these early parodies, Sherlock is off on the wrong track in the
great Coleslaw mystery, struggling with the disappearance of the
President's Whisker, rescuing that damsel in distress, Elsa
Lohengrin, and even delving into the spirit world---and much more.
Mark Twain, the Mr. Dooley of Finley Peter Dunne, Kenneth Grahame's
Ratty of The Wind in the Willows, John Kendrick Bangs, Bret Harte,
Ring Lardner, C. K. Chesterton, and O. Henry all contributed to
this early Bedside collection. Sherlock turns up at Wellseley
College and Yale, Hades and The Garden of Eden, Peoria and the
Oklahoma Territory, in the trenches of War I and often in his
familiar Baker Street hangout. Sherlockian Charles Press began
collecting these early lampoons as a hobby after retiring from
Michigan State University. He is the author of two Sherlockian
monographs, Parodies and Pastiches, Buzzing Round Sir Arthur Conan
Doyle, and Looking Over Sir Arthur's Shoulder, and "When Did Arthur
Conan Doyle Meet Jean Leckie?" in The Baker Street Journal.
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