The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes (version 2)
Gelesen von Eric Leach
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Sherlock Holmes, a fictional character of the late 19th and early 20th century created by Scottish author and physician Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, is a brilliant London-based "consulting detective" famous for his intellectual prowess and renowned for his enormous scope of observation, his astute logical reasoning and forensic science skills in solving difficult crimes. The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes is a collection of Sherlock Holmes mysteries, including The Final Problem in which Holmes confronts his arch-nemesis Professor Moriarty, originally published in 1894, which are preceded by The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes and followed by The Hound of the Baskervilles. (Adapted from Wikipedia) (7 hr 33 min)
Chapters
Bewertungen
Another exciting collection
Dean
I started with The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes and listened to this next. I expected a certain level of suspense and surprise at the way Holmes finds resolution for his Adventures, and I wasn't disappointed. I'll definitely buy a hard copy when I get the chance.
Sherlock Holmes is best detective in the world
Elijah
SHERLOCK HOLMES IS THE BEST DETECTIVE IN THE WORLD NO ONE ELSE IS ANYWHERE CLOSE TO AS GREAT AS HE IS reader is very good does voices well
An incredible book and an incredible narration
Paul
All of the Sherlock stories are masterpieces and the narrator does justice to the ones contained in this book. The stories are riveting and the narrator flawlessly relays them.
well done!
Traveller
my only criticism is of personal taste I would have preferred a British voice but the read was very clear nevertheless. if only Benedict Cumberbatch would agree to record some for public domain!
Jolly Robin
Dear "2Dogs", and others who deem it right that they leave adverse comments on the reading. Cockney accent: very difficult to succeed in this. A Victorian "Cockney" must have sounded very different from a late 20th century one. Also, many a person living in England tries, even these days to disguise their "working class" accent and upbringing for social reasons. If you try to remind yourself of this possibility, you might be able to generously allow that the reader might be impersonating a "toff". The first time I heard my Cockney husband chatting to his old cronies back in the East End, I realised how hard he had worked to change his diction in every way.
sandy
Love, love, love this narrator. Excellent use of voice to create the various characters. Ruth is an outstanding narrator and, of course, you can’t go wrong with Conan Doyle.
Best Reader!
Rhi256
The narrator is extremely upbeat which lends to the action of the stories! Listened to several but this is my best by far...
The End of Holmes?
Keith Horvath
If this, I believe to be the proper order written, is the 1st story to mention Moriarty. Is it the end of such a fine gentleman as told? Suppose we will see