Professor Moriarty: The Hound of the D'Urbevilles, by Kim Newman - which I read in audio - is not for the faint-hearted reader. It gives us the flipside of some of those well-known Sherlock Holmes adventures, but from the viewpoint of his arch-enemy - Professor James Moriarty. The book has been written in the style of the memoir of one of the people closest to Moriarty - Colonel "Basher" Moran, who fits a similar space in the criminal world as Dr Watson does in the crime detecting world. Basher gives his views on everything, and I mean everything - and pretty much all of them are shocking to the modern mind .. well, to this modern mind anyway. His views on women and anyone who isn't English are jaw-droppingly scandalous. He is pretty much an irredeemable character ... until you put him in the company of Professor Moriarty, who has no feeling for anyone else and is totally without a moral compass. With all this going on - how could I possibly enjoy this book? Well, I have to say, I did. Kim Newman breathes new life into stories we thought we knew backwards. This is not a celebration of the criminal world, being almost totally devoid of glamour and pretty much a guaranteed short life, but it is compelling and not without its lighter side. Whilst I wouldn't recommend this book to everyone, for those who are happy to take it for what it is - an outrageous, grimy, funny, violent and fast-paced adventure into the underbelly of the Victorian era - then it's a cracking read.
My STAR rating: FOUR
Length: 320 print pages.
Price I paid: £5.33.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio download; ebook.
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