A Slight Trick of the Mind

· Anchor
3.9
8 reviews
Ebook
272
Pages
Eligible
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About this ebook

The basis for the Major Motion Picture Mr. Holmes starring Ian McKellen and Laura Linney and directed by Bill Condon.

It is 1947, and the long-retired Sherlock Holmes, now 93, lives in a remote Sussex farmhouse with his housekeeper and her young son. He tends to his bees, writes in his journal, and grapples with the diminishing powers of his mind. But in the twilight of his life, as people continue to look to him for answers, Holmes revisits a case that may provide him with answers of his own to questions he didn’t even know he was asking–about life, about love, and about the limits of the mind’s ability to know. A novel of exceptional grace and literary sensitivity, A Slight Trick of the Mind is a brilliant imagining of our greatest fictional detective and a stunning inquiry into the mysteries of human connection.

Ratings and reviews

3.9
8 reviews
A Google user
June 25, 2009
It's okay. Because Holmes is so old, the book explores his fading memory, and gives us a sense of his disorientation, by jumping around in time to three different storylines. One is Holmes in the present at his bee farm in Sussex, another is Holmes in the recent past on a visit to a correspondent in post-WWII Japan, and finally Holmes in the distant past during a case involving a woman named Mrs. Keller. It's an interesting premise, but I was frequently annoyed by the literary device of showing a scene, then coming back to it later, repeating the scene almost verbatim with only a slight change of perspective to give it more meaning. Other things annoyed me, such as the lack of Watson, who is only mentioned now and then, and his death is not even given its own space, but combined with that of Mrs. Hudson. I don't like the idea that Holmes is so obsessed with royal jelly, prickly pears, and other methods of prolonging his life, either, because it seems pathetic. Also, Holmes reflecting on the changing world and the futility of war could have been done in the wake of WWI, instead of extending him out to WWII. To me, it seemed unnecessary to add the atomic age to this story. Holmes serves as a father figure to two different characters, and it's a little strange for the book to claim that it's surprising for Holmes to make friends with a boy. Holmes always got along with kids, whether it was the Baker Street Irregulars or other random kids he employed like Cartwright in "Hound of the Baskervilles" or even the black girl in "The Yellow Face" that he held laughingly. The book is not badly written, but I got bored and frustrated sometimes with the plot going too slow.
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About the author

MITCH CULLIN is the author of ten books, including A Slight Trick of the Mind, Tideland, and Branches, a novel-in-verse. His fiction has been translated into over 20 languages. He currently lives near Los Angeles, where he is working as a photographer while also collaborating on various projects with Peter I. Chang. He can be found on Facebook at www.facebook.com/mitchthecullin.

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