I don’t think Bret Harte’s read much today, but during his lifetime he was quite popular. He primarily wrote Westerns, but also penned a number of parodies of contemporary authors. I also don’t know if he personally knew Conan Doyle, but Doyle had read some of his writing and even admitted an early debt.
“The Stolen Cigar-Case” came out in 1900, a time when Doyle was still cranking out Holmes stories at a good clip. It’s very much a parody pastiche, with the narrator being the assistant of the great detective “Hemlock Jones.” It’s quite funny, but I wonder what Doyle thought of it. It has a real edge, playing up Watson’s sycophancy as a sniveling codependent (the story begins with his throwing himself at Jones’s feet and then caressing his boot) while giving us a Holmes who is just a brainless, bullying airbag with delusions of grandeur. This isn’t a gentle satire and I got the sense that there was something about the Holmes stories that really bothered Harte. The thing is, I don’t know if that would have upset Doyle. He’d already had his fill of Hemlock too.
Yeah, considering how Doyle felt about Holmes, I wonder if he cared at all. Maybe he hoped the mocking would turn people off of Holmes so he could stop writing him?
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Doyle definitely seems to have had a pretty free attitude toward what people did with regard to adapting the character. When one playwright married him off he wrote a letter saying he could do whatever he wanted, he didn’t care. You wouldn’t find that attitude as much these days.
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Did he just write the one pastiche of Holmes?
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I think so, but I’m really not familiar with his work at all. This is all I know of.
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A contemporary satire. This one sounds interesting!
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It’s a fun little story. Available online plenty of places and quite short. Enjoy!
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