Adaptations Studies The consistent musicality of Sherlock Holmes on the screen is remarkable considering the diversity of adaptations. Compared to the three other most often adapted literary figures (Count Dracula, Tarzan, and Frankenstein’s monster), Sherlock Holmes is the lone musician, one moreover associated with iconic props: his violin, pipe, hat and coat. Although Doyle consistently relies on these identity-anchoring props, the stories of the Canon are hardly unified. The narrative tone
Edgar Allan Poe’s Auguste Dupin and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes embody what any private investigator should aspire to be, but at times they can be overconfident. Although these two detectives come from different authors and different time periods, they both exhibit traits that make them masters of their craft; the good and bad. Holmes and Dupin share many traits that make their personalities and detective skills similar,
“The Hound of the Baskervilles” Research Paper Sir Arthur Conan Doyle has created many countless works of literature that are considered to be great. Among these great works of literature is a series of stories known as Sherlock Holmes. Sherlock Holmes is composed of many stories including but not limited to: “Scandal in Bohemia”, “Giant Rat of Sumatra”, “The Speckled Band”, and “The Hound of the Baskervilles” (Pascal72). The Sherlock Holmes series is some of Doyle’s most well
representatives of the genre. While the former creates Sherlock Holmes at the time when detective fiction just appeared
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