The Adventure of the Greek Interpreter is one of 12 stories in the cycle collected as The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes. The story was originally serialised in the Strand Magazine in 1893. This story introduces Holmes's elder brother Mycroft who,according to Holmes, is endowed with powers of observation and deduction even better than his.
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"A collection of wonderful stories featuring our beloved Sherlock Holmes and his dear friend Watson. I very much enjoy the criminal and non-criminal mysteries that are featured in these further works of Doyle's and intend to continue my love affair with the Memoirs. " — Mollie (5 out of 5 stars)
"A collection of wonderful stories featuring our beloved Sherlock Holmes and his dear friend Watson. I very much enjoy the criminal and non-criminal mysteries that are featured in these further works of Doyle's and intend to continue my love affair with the Memoirs. "
" Each story is quite clever and entertaining, they are pretty addicting to me, once you finish one its hard not to go on to another. "
" My favorite collection of Holmes tales :-) "
" What a great read! I love the mysteries, the characters, and the dialog has made me laugh out loud several times. I will have to work my way through the whole series now that I know how great these are. "
" about 20% of the way through, thoroughly enjoyable read. "
" One of Doyle's best collections. I was pleased to find this in Amazon's Kindle books. "
" It took some time,but it was worth it. Read this!!!!!! "
" The original "procedural", but in fiction form and focusing on logic instead of high tech science. "
" An old friend to spend time with time and again when nothinb else entertains. "
" This is a fun book and I think makes the current movie (made in 2009) look even better. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle certainly made him out to be quite the character, much more so than his secondary authors did. "
" I love love love these books. I read them for my bed time stories. "
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1859–1930) was born of Irish parentage in Scotland. He studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh, but he also had a passion for storytelling. His first book introduced that prototype of the modern detective in fiction, Sherlock Holmes. Despite the immense popularity Holmes gained throughout the world, Doyle was not overly fond of the character and preferred to write other stories. Eventually popular demand won out and he continued to satisfy readers with the adventures of the legendary sleuth. He also wrote historical romances and made two essays into pseudoscientific fantasy: The Lost World and The Poison Belt.
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