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  • The Science of Sherlock Holmes

  • From Baskerville Hall to the Valley of Fear, the Real Forensics Behind the Great Detective's Greatest Cases
  • By: E. J. Wagner
  • Narrated by: E. J. Wagner, Simon Prebble
  • Length: 8 hrs and 37 mins
  • 3.9 out of 5 stars (18 ratings)
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The Science of Sherlock Holmes

By: E. J. Wagner
Narrated by: E. J. Wagner, Simon Prebble
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Summary

The Science of Sherlock Holmes is a wild ride in a hansom cab along the road paved by Sherlock Holmes—a ride that leads us through medicine, law, pathology, toxicology, anatomy, blood chemistry, and the emergence of real-life forensic science during the 19th and 20th centuries.

From the "well-marked print of a thumb" on a whitewashed wall in "The Adventure of the Norwood Builder" to the trajectory and impact of a bullet in "The Reigate Squires", author E. J. Wagner uses the Great Detective's remarkable adventures as springboards into the real-life forensics behind them.

You'll meet scientists, investigators, and medical experts, such as the larger-than-life Eugène Vidocq of the Paris Sûreté, the determined detective Henry Goddard of London's Bow Street Runners, the fingerprint expert Sir Francis Galton, and the brilliant but arrogant pathologist Sir Bernard Spilsbury. You'll explore the ancient myths and bizarre folklore that were challenged by the evolving field of forensics and examine the role that brain fever, Black Dogs, and vampires played in criminal history.

Real-life Holmesian mysteries abound throughout the book. What happened to Dr. George Parkman, wealthy physician and philanthropist, last seen entering the Harvard College of Medicine in 1849? The trial included some of the first expert testimony on handwriting analysis on record—some of it foreshadowing what Holmes said of printed evidence years later in The Hound of the Baskervilles, "But this is my special hobby, and the differences are equally obvious."

Through numerous cases, including celebrated ones such as those of Jack the Ripper and Lizzie Borden, the author traces the influence of the coolly analytical Holmes on the gradual emergence of forensic science from the grip of superstition. You'll find yourself listening to The Science of Sherlock Holmes as eagerly as you would those of any Holmes mystery.

©2006 E.J. Wagner (P)2010 Audible, Inc.

Critic reviews

  • Edgar Award, Best Critical / Biographical Work, 2007

"E. J. Wagner demonstrates that without the work of Sherlock Holmes and his contemporaries, the CSI teams would be twiddling their collective thumbs. Her accounts of Victorian crimes make Watson's tales pale! Highly recommended for students of the Master Detective." (Leslie S. Klinger, Editor, The New Annotated Sherlock Holmes)
"What really makes The Science of Sherlock Holmes stand out is Wagner's easy and engaging style. The book reads like a series of highly entertaining and informative lectures making the subject matter accessible to both the layman and serious student alike... Bottom line: An absolute must-have addition to the Sherlockian non-fiction shelf that is highly recommended to the general reader, Sherlockian and even, dare I say it, CSI fan." (Charles V. Prepolec, Sherlock magazine)

"interesting, informative, and even enlightening." ( AudioFile)

What listeners say about The Science of Sherlock Holmes

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    5 out of 5 stars

Eclectic voyage through the history of crime.

The author is narrator, which has some merit, but although she's an academic and so, presumably, accustomed to speak in public, she's not an actor, so delivery is not perfect, and her pronunciation of European proper nouns can be jarring to the non-USA ear.
However, she does present an entertaining and enlightening history of forensic science, linking fact with Holmesian and other classic fiction, and drawing on cases, some very famous, some less well known, from UK and US, France, Germany mainly, with awareness of varied culture and legal systems -Scots law is not English law, for example, we have the third verdict of "not proven" so important before capital punishment was abolished.
She does, however, refer to the august alma mater I share with Arthur Conan Doyle as "a non-residential school"!
This is Edinburgh University, founded 1583, but perhaps her odd description isn't a put down in US English...
(Or maybe she had funding from St Andrews, Aberdeen or Glasgow - our older rivals - JUST JOKING!)
There is amusing advice on performing post-mortems on the dining room table, or even in the kirkyard after the service. I suspect this was more a US thing; in my adult lifetime, emergency surgery or Caesarian sections on the kitchen table in some remote part of Highlands and Islands, but never heard of a pathologist keen to persuade the Air Ambulance out in bad weather to dismantle the dead.
It is well worth a couple of listens, and it's mostly good stuff

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    3 out of 5 stars
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Meh...didn't live up to expectations.

A pretty good introduction to early forensic science marred by the author's narration- I think she's going for eerie but her Schlick soon gets a little tiresome. It's apparent that the book was well researched and does not rely overmuch on the usual examples drawn from real life that are often trotted out in books on criminology.

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    4 out of 5 stars

Interesting book bad narration

Interesting book but the narrator has odd emphasis on words. An interesting focus on the history of forensic examination of crime

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