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Moriarty: The Hound of the D'Urbervilles

Page 44

by Kim Newman


  The too-good-to-resist notion of Holmes co-existing with characters created by other people has been around since his heyday (in Boothby’s Prince of Swindlers and C.S. Lewis’s The Magician’s Nephew, for instance, Holmes is mentioned as a real person) but took hold in my mind thanks to Philip José Farmer’s ‘biographies’ Tarzan Alive and Doc Savage – His Apocalyptic Life, which mean more to me than anything by Edgar Rice Burroughs or Lester Dent. A comedy sketch TV series of the early 1970s starring a forgotten Welsh double act (Ryan and Ronnie) had Holmes pursue Dracula; this may be what started me thinking along lines which would lead to the Anno Dracula and Diogenes Club books, and now this Moriarty-Moran effort. The 1971–3 ITV series The Rivals of Sherlock Holmes, based on Sir Hugh Greene’s anthologies, introduced me to the likes of Simon Carne and Carnacki the Ghost-Finder; both seasons of the show are now out on DVD (thanks to Luciano Chelotti and Grace Ker of Network Releasing) and worth your while. Would that there had been spin-off series starring Roy Dotrice and Donald Pleasence as Carne and Carnacki. In this book, it’s been hard to avoid the long shadow of George Macdonald Fraser’s Flashman, so I should especially mention Royal Flash (and Richard Lester’s film), the Prisoner of Zenda pastiche, and Flashman and the Tiger, in which Flashman meets Moran. Doyle’s Sebastian Moran and Fraser’s Harry Flashman have much in common: they’re both amoral rogues with a shelfload of medals, but at least Moran actually earned his gongs.

  Besides other writers’ novels, collections and short stories, I wouldn’t have been able to write The Hound of the d’Urbervilles without reference books. Baring-Gould’s Annotated Sherlock Holmes and Sherlock Holmes of Baker Street: A Biography are still the best place to start, but Leslie S. Klinger’s more recent New Annotated Sherlock Holmes and Annotated Dracula are just as essential. In addition, I kept turning to Jess Nevins’ The Encyclopedia of Fantastic Victoriana (Dr Quartz and M. Sabin wouldn’t be here without it), Matthew E. Bunson’s The Sherlock Holmes Encyclopedia, Leonard Wolf’s The Annotated Dracula, David Kalat’s The Strange Case of Dr Mabuse, Sally Mitchell’s Victorian Britain: An Encyclopedia, and more reference sites on the internet than I can list, inevitably including Wikipedia (how did writers get by before they could instantly to look up whose signature was on British banknotes in 1891 or find out where the Astronomer Royal lives?).

  Doyle invented Professor Moriarty to kill off Holmes in ‘The Final Problem and, ten years later, invented Sebastian Moran to bring him back in ‘The Empty House’. This circumstance means Moriarty and Moran, supposedly partners in crime, share no scenes in the canon. Given that, like many archnemeses, Moriarty is a dark doppelganger for the hero, hints at the notion that Moran might be his ‘Watson’ – which is present in several early plays and films. In Silver Blaze, aka Murder at the Baskervilles, which tips the villains into an adaptation of the Moriarty-free short story (and sets it at Baskerville Hall to boot), Moran (Arthur Goullet) is plainly a sounding board and fetch-and-carry man for Moriarty (Lyn Harding). When reviewing this minor 1937 film for Nathaniel Thompson’s DVD Delirium, I noted the Moran-as-Watson angle and mentally filed it away. Later, Ann Kelly of BBC Online asked me to write a Holmes story (something I’ve strictly avoided doing) and I returned to the Moran-Moriarty idea for ‘A Shambles in Belgravia’, which became a template for a series (one Doyle ‘guest star’, one other Victorian literary source, a parody title, a ‘case’ that doesn’t turn out well). Subsequently, Marvin Kaye commissioned ‘A Volume in Vermilion’ for Sherlock Holmes’ Mystery Magazine and Charles Prepolec solicited ‘The Red Planet League’ and ‘The Adventure of the Six Maledictions’ for his anthologies Gaslight Grimoire and Gaslight Arcanum. Thanks to these editors for their input into something I knew would be a novel disguised as a collection as soon as I wrote the meeting of Moran and Moriarty and realised how this relationship would end at the waterfall. Thanks also to David Barraclough, who suggested me for Titan’s fiction line just before leaving the company, and Cath Trechman, my stalwart and intrepid editor. My agents, Antony Harwood, James Macdonald Lockhart and Fay Davies were involved.

  Thanks as ever to people who helped out with emotional support, random kindness and odd bits of information or inspiration: Pete Atkins, Eugene Byrne, Susan Byrne, Meg Davis, Pat Cadigan, David Cross, Alex Dunn, Val and Les Edwards, Jo Fletcher, Christopher Fowler, Christopher Frayling, Neil Gaiman (who has also written a Moran-as-narrator story – and came up with the ‘Professor Moriarty retires to Essex to keep wasps’ joke), Mark Gatiss (who parallels the ‘consulting criminal’ premise, but added a Jim’ll Fix It joke I wish I’d thought of), John Courtenay Grimwood, Maxim Jakubowski, Rodney Jones, Stephen Jones, Yung Kha, Jean-Marc Lofficier, Tim and Donna Lucas, Paul McAuley, Maura McHugh (who maintains my website at johnnyalucard.com), Helen Mullane, Sara and Rita Paço, Sarah Pinborough, Chris Roberson, Russell Schechter, Dean Skilton, Brian Smedley, Tom Tunney, Stephen Volk and the members of the ‘Kim Newman’s Anno Dracula books’ Facebook group.

  Kim Newman, Islington, 2011

  AVAILABLE NOW:

  ANNO DRACULA

  KIM NEWMAN

  It is 1888 and Queen Victoria has remarried, taking as her new consort Vlad Tepes, the Wallachian Prince infamously known as Count Dracula. His polluted bloodline spreads through London as its citizens increasingly choose to become vampires.

  In the grim backstreets of Whitechapel, a killer known as ‘Silver Knife’ is cutting down vampire girls. The eternally young vampire Geneviève Dieudonné and Charles Beauregard of the Diogenes Club are drawn together as they both hunt the sadistic killer, bringing them every close to Britain’s most bloodthirsty ruler yet.

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  KIM NEWMAN

  1918 and Dracula is commander-in-chief of the armies of Germany and Austria-Hungary. The war of the great powers in Europe is also a war between the living and the dead. As ever the Diogenes Club is at the heart of British Intelligence and Charles Beauregard and his protegé Edwin Winthrop go head-to-head with the lethal vampire flying machine that is the Bloody Red Baron...

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  ANNO DRACULA: DRACULA CHA CHA CHA

  KIM NEWMAN

  Rome 1959 and Count Dracula is about to marry the Moldavian Princess Asa Vajda. Journalist Kate Reed flies into the city to visit the ailing Charles Beauregard and his vampire companion Genevieve. She finds herself caught up in the mystery of the Crimson Executioner who is bloodily dispatching vampire elders in the city. She is on his trail, as is the undead British secret agent Bond.

  A brand-new edition, with additional unpublished novella, of the popular third instalment of the Anno Dracula series.

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  ANNO DRACULA: JOHNNY ALUCARD

  KIM NEWMAN

  1976 and Kate Reed is on the set of Francis Ford Coppola’s Dracula. She helps
a young vampire boy, Ion Popescu, who leaves Transylvania for America. In the States, Popescu becomes Johnny Pop and attaches himself to Andy Warhol, inventing a new drug which confers vampire powers on its users...

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  SHERLOCK HOLMES: THE BREATH OF GOD

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  A body is found crushed to death in the London snow. There are no footprints anywhere near it. It is almost as if the man was killed by the air itself. This is the first in a series of attacks that sees a handful of London’s most prominent occultists murdered. While pursuing the case, Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson find themselves traveling to Scotland to meet with the one person they have been told can help: Aleister Crowley.

  As dark powers encircle them, Holmes’ rationalist beliefs begin to be questioned. The unbelievable and unholy are on their trail as they gather a group of the most accomplished occult minds in the country: Doctor John Silence, the so-called “Psychic Doctor”; supernatural investigator Thomas Carnacki; runic expert and demonologist, Julian Karswell...

  But will they be enough? As the century draws to a close it seems London is ready to fall and the infernal abyss is growing wide enough to swallow us all.

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  Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s timeless creation returns in a series of handsomely designed detective stories. The Further Adventures of Sherlock Holmes encapsulates the most varied and thrilling cases of the world’s greatest detective.

  THE ECTOPLASMIC MAN

  BY DANIEL STASHOWER

  THE WAR OF THE WORLDS

  BY MANLEY WADE WELLMAN & WADE WELLMAN

  THE SCROLL OF THE DEAD

  BY DAVID STUART DAVIES

  THE STALWART COMPANIONS

  BY H. PAUL JEFFERS

  THE VEILED DETECTIVE

  BY DAVID STUART DAVIES

  THE MAN FROM HELL

  BY BARRIE ROBERTS

  SÉANCE FOR A VAMPIRE

  BY FRED SABERHAGEN

  THE SEVENTH BULLET

  BY DANIEL D. VICTOR

  THE WHITECHAPEL HORRORS

  BY EDWARD B. HANNA

  DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HOLMES

  BY LOREN D. ESTLEMAN

  THE ANGEL OF THE OPERA

  BY SAM SICILIANO

  THE GIANT RAT OF SUMATRA

  BY RICHARD L. BOYER

  THE PEERLESS PEER

  BY PHILIP JOSÈ FARMER

  THE STAR OF INDIA

  BY CAROLE BUGGÈ

  COMING SOON:

  THE WEB WEAVER

  BY SAM SICILIANO

  THE TITANIC TRAGEDY

  BY WILLIAM SEIL

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