500 Words From is a series of guest posts from writers, in which they
talk about their latest books. UK-based Tim Symonds writes Sherlock Holmes novels.
He has just published Sherlock Holmes and the Nine-Dragon
Sigil,
which takes Holmes and Watson to
the Forbidden City in Beijing - at the time in the West still called Peking - during the turbulent last days
of the Qing dynasty. If you’ve never heard of a sigil, it’s an occult symbol. In Tim’s novel,
a menacing nine-dragon sigil is embroidered on the back of a gown the Empress-Dowager
Cixi gives her son.
So: over to Tim...
Sherlock Holmes
and the Nine-Dragon Sigil also takes place in a vast old Empire, the Qing or
Ch’ing, at the start of the 20th Century when, as the Chinese
say, Heaven was withdrawing its mandate. So, you can see setting it in China
followed a pattern in my previous novels where great empires – the Ottomans,
the Hapsburgs – were in sharp decline.
My choice of Peking as a setting was influenced by reading Conan
Doyle’s The Adventure of the Empty House
where Sherlock Holmes tells Dr. Watson: “I travelled for two years in Tibet,
therefore, and amused myself by visiting Lhassa and spending some days with the
head Lama”.
This mysterious period is Holmes’ life is known to readers of the
Arthur Conan Doyle canon as The Great
Hiatus. Whilst Holmes was in Tibet, everybody back home believed the famous
detective had died in the clutches of the evil Professor Moriarty at
Switzerland’s Reichenbach Falls. I wondered: could a heavily disguised Holmes
have gone beyond ‘Lhassa’ (Lhasa), following in the footsteps of Marco Polo all
the way to the Middle Kingdom?
Choosing a setting so far, and so different, from Holmes’ European
haunts allowed me to push his deductive powers to the limit – a detective is
far better able to interpret the clues back home, in familiar surroundings than
when everything is foreign to him. Indeed, in the Forbidden City Holmes comes
close complete failure. I would even say this is just about the closest he came
to failure in his career!
However, he won through in the end, and caught his criminal. To
find out how, you’ll have to read my novel, but here’s a clue: Holmes deploys
his famous photographic memory to help him solve the case.
Details: Sherlock Holmes and the Nine-Dragon
Sigil is
published in eBook by MX Publishing. They also
publish Watson's Afghan Adventure, by Kieran McMullen, in which Watson explains
how a treasure map brought him to Afghanistan.