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  • - October 2020
    af Larry Lefkowitz
    142,95 kr.

    Our annual Sherlock Holmes themed double issue is stuffed full with pastiches, parodies and articles."The Case Of The Count Of Saint Germain" by Martin Rosenstock: War is on the horizon, and the German ambassador narrowly escapes an assassin in London. Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson must investigate, and encounter the immortal Count of Saint Germain."The Case Of Vigor, The Hammersmith Wonder" by Larry Lefkowitz: Holmes and Watson must solve a locked room mystery with seemingly no clues."The Adventure Of The Turned Tables" by Michael Mallory: It is the Diamond Jubilee celebration of Queen Victoria, and Sherlock Holmes discovers a series of puzzling crimes he can only explain in one way: the late, not lamented Professor Moriarty, who presumably died six years earlier, has returned."The Adventure Of Sherlock Hominid" by Teel James Glenn: A talking chimpanzee who travels to alternate relies uses deductive reasoning to solve a locked room murder à la Sherlock Holmes!"The Baker Station Irregulars" by Eric Del Carlo: On a space station a Holmesian character tries to unravel the events which led to the murder and mutilation of a famous pugilist."Strangers In Blood" by Adam Beau Mcfarlane: The children of Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson live in Jazz Age New York City. They're hired to investigate a seance."A Clockwork Crook" by John H. Dromey: A Victorian damsel is in distress. Can a steampunk professor and an opera singer come to her rescue in time?"The Case Of The Burnt Wires" by J.J. White: Dr. Watson narrates a lost case that could not be revealed until Mr Sherlock Holmes's death. "The Affair Of The Heart" by Teel James Glenn: Holmes and Watson are not he scene when a young man has a heart attack on a train-but was it natural?"Death And The Doctor" by Adam Beau Mcfarlane: In New York City during the Jazz Age, the children of Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson solve a murder. Did a malevolent soul hide behind the exterior mask of a well-schooled gentleman?"The Silent Sherlock" by Philip Leibfried: This is an article telling of all the silent film adaptations of Sherlock Holmes. It includes American and foreign films."Beggars Can Be Choosers" by Bruce Harris: This Sherlock Holmes essay examines Hugh Boone, the street beggar in 'The Man With The Twisted Lip'."Nevermore" by David Bart: In this Poe-ish tale, Lyle Scoggins is a veteran, a cat owner and a successful crook. So, why do they want him dead?"Birthday Party" by Bruce McAllister: The self-aware artificial intelligence that runs the superyacht of a billionaire who just died hosts a birthday party for him anyway-one with a special theme."What Lies Beneath The Bandages" by Richard Zwicker: The monster of Frankenstein has returned to Geneva and reinvented himself as a consulting detective. His motto: no case too monstrous. That remains to be seen when his client is attacked by a mummy."Mark Of Shame" by Roxanne Dent: Smart but saddled with a new partner he resents, Detective Martinez investigates the death of a Halloween fanatic in an upscale Massachusetts community.And we have the special Sherlock Holmes themed "Thiefsgiving" A You-Solve-It by Laird Long.Basis Rathbone and Nigel Bruce custom cover art by the talented Robin Grenville-Evans.

  • af Larry Lefkowitz
    117,95 kr.

    The Critic, the Assistant Critic, and Victoria tells the story of the assistant to a well-known literary critic who suffers from the dominance of the critic and from the critic's practice to "borrow" abundantly from the assistant's work and publish it under his own name. After the critic's sudden death, the assistant believes he has been freed, finally, from the critic's dominance. However, when the critic's widow -- the beautiful Victoria -- asks him to complete an unfinished novel written by her late husband, the assistant finds himself still under the influence of the critic, as well as his wife. Although set in Israel, the novel is appealing to the international reader because of its universality of plot, literary background, sharp and witty dialogue, and humor. Philip Roth meets Woody Allen. A book worthy of the New York Times' recommended reading list.

  • af Larry Lefkowitz
    142,95 kr.

    Allen Ginsberg, while in the New York State Psychiatric Institute, met Carl Solomon. Their first exchange: Solomon: "Who are you?" Ginsberg: "I'm Myshkin." Solomon: "I'm Kirilov." From that moment their friendship started. Myshkin is the idiot in Dostoyevsky's 'The Idiot" (he ends his life in a Swiss asylum) while Kirilov is one of the possessed characters in Dostoyevsky's 'The Possessed". Sometimes diverse cultures meet. The heroic samurai Benkei, according to Japanese legend, killed a giant carp which had swallowed his mother when she fell into a waterfall. It is not recorded if Benkei lost his taste for gefilte fish or sushi. The Japanese legendary monster, the Nu, was slain by a samurai no less brave than Benkei. Benkei, disappointedly, is apparently not Japanese affectionate for Benjamin. A Yiddish version would have substituted "mother-in-law" for "mother" and worked in the Yiddish for "Adam was fortunate - he didn't have a mother-in-law."The ultimate "Nu?": Gertrude Stein, dying, asked "What is the question?"

  • af Jenean McBrearty, Larry Lefkowitz & Ellen Denton
    102,95 kr.

  • af Larry Lefkowitz
    192,95 kr.

    Enigmatic Tales is a collection of twenty-seven Jewish stories whose characters live in the world but strive to understand it, faithful to the saying that if Jews don't know the answer, they answer with a question.

  • af Larry Lefkowitz
    239,95 kr.

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