Regular Price: 19.95 USD
Dr. Amy Winslow tells the story: in foggy, nighttime San Francisco a jogging SFPD captain is savagely attacked by a Bengal tiger which then vanishes. In her ER, Amy labors unsuccessfully to save the captain’s life, then consoles his aggrieved closest friend, Lt. Luis Ortega. Neither suspects their lives will intertwine in a life-or-death mystery.
The next day, checking on former patient Mrs. Hudson at her Victorian house isolated in Marin County’s forest, Amy discovers in the cellar a secret, cobweb-covered 1899 electrochemical laboratory containing a Jules Verne–esque steam-punk sarcophagus out of which springs a wild-eyed, half-mummified, crypt-keeper-like man who injects himself with something before falling dead at her feet. Amy barely revives him.
He claims to be a real-life Victorian master chemist and detective named Holmes, who allowed Conan Doyle to write stories based on his cases, though was slightly annoyed when Doyle changed his real first name to the catchier Sherlock. Becoming uninspired by 1890s crime, Holmes devised this method to hibernate for a century to investigate future mysteries.
Amy assumes he’s a lunatic. His Scotland Yard identity papers were stolen while he slept, so it takes her a while to realize his amazing story is true.
Respectably handsome when cleaned up, Holmes is still the same brash, egoistic, uber-English, cocaine-addicted, non-feminist genius—but now a century out of sync—so his still-brilliant deductions are sometimes laughingly or dangerously wrong. Holmes and Amy, his reluctant new Watson, find themselves unexpectedly attracted to each other while perilously involved in reclaiming his proof of identity, aided by cybersavvy street teen Zapper. It’s all connected to the horrific death-by-tiger, only the first of several bizarre, mystifying murders being committed by an exquisitely fiendish descendant of Holmes’ Victorian archenemy, Professor Moriarty.
The tone is classic Holmes—plus a refreshing twist of fish-out-of-water humor with a surprising spark of real romance.
Kenneth Johnson is the narrator of Holmes Coming audiobook that was written by Kenneth Johnson
Kenneth Johnson is the author of Holmes Coming
Narrator | Kenneth Johnson |
Length | 9 hours 52 minutes |
Author | Kenneth Johnson |
Publisher | Blackstone Publishing |
Release date | January 28, 2023 |
ISBN | 9798200706075 |
According to Blackstone Publishing, the Publisher of Holmes Coming Audiobook, Holmes Coming includes the following subjects: The BISAC Subject Code is Fiction, Mystery & Detective, General
The imprint is Blackstone Publishing. It is supplied by Blackstone Publishing. The ISBN-13 is 9798200706075.
This book is only available in the United States.
By: Jessica Knoll
By: Mark Manson
By: Dale Carnegie
By: Stephen King
By: Laura Dave
By: Colleen Hoover
By: Dan Brown
By: Rebecca Connolly
By: Khaled Hosseini
By: Khaled Hosseini
By: Frank Herbert
By: Samantha Jayne Allen
By: J. R. R. Tolkien
By: Kelly Ripa
By: Bill O'Reilly
By: Alex Michaelides
By: Kristin Hannah
By: Taylor Jenkins Reid
By: Fredrik Backman
By: Yuval Noah Harari
By: Neil deGrasse Tyson
By: Mary Kubica
By: J. R. R. Tolkien
By: Fredrik Backman
By: Max Lucado
By: J. R. R. Tolkien
By: Colleen Hoover
By: Sarah J. Maas
By: Shelby Van Pelt
By: C. S. Lewis
By: Jocko Willink
By: Anthony Doerr
By: Chris Voss
By: Colleen Hoover
By: Vince Flynn
By: Brandon Sanderson
By: Gary John Bishop
By: Paulo Coelho
By: Dr. Norman Vincent Peale
By: Oprah Winfrey
By: Gillian Mcallister
By: Ian McEwan
By: Jennette Mccurdy
By: Becky Kennedy
By: Veronica Roth
By: J. R. R. Tolkien
By: Stephen R. Covey
By: Viola Davis