Holmes: The Case of the Gifted Amateur

The multifaceted J. C. Masterman published this slight send-up of a Holmes story in 1952, and it still stands as one of the more complex entries in that genre.

So much so that one might even ask if it’s a send-up. The story is narrated by Inspector Lestrade, who is being interviewed at a Surrey nursing home by a writer digging for Holmesiana. As is so often the case, Lestrade is less interested in Holmes’s exploits than he is in his own, being the hero of his own story. He does, however, manage to recall this tale of the theft of the Dark Diamond of Dungbura from a semi-locked room (we know who went in and out of the room, and that the thief couldn’t have been anyone else). The reason he shares this story with the interviewer is because he sees it as casting Holmes in a bad light, as little more than the “gifted amateur” he wants to make him out to be.

But does he? It’s a quick story with a nifty trick to it, as there’s one person with access to the room who we don’t suspect. The real question though is whether Holmes might be ahead of the game, and is only looking on with a sense of irony as the culprit falls into what was a trap while the Gifted Amateur ends up getting paid.

That’s the feeling I had anyway, coming away from the story thinking that it was another example of Lestrade being too thick to understand, even after the fact, that he’s been played.

Holmes index

13 thoughts on “Holmes: The Case of the Gifted Amateur

  1. Are these standalones that you’ve picked up or do you have a “Big Book of Holmes Fanfic”?
    I also think it goes to show how well done the originals were that they can not only survive but thrive in stories like this and others.

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  2. Reminds me of “The Biter Bit” by Wilkie Collins, which is also about a cop who thinks he’s smarter than he really is. Very funny if you haven’t read it.

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