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Tag Archives: Sax Rohmer
Sherlock Holmes / Author Amnon Kabatchnik
My love affair with detective fiction began decades ago in a far-away country where people read and write from right to left. Paperbacks began to arrive in Israel from the U.S. and England, and I couldn’t resist the pictorial, enticing … Continue reading
Posted in Guest Blogger Series
Tagged 221B Baker Street, Agatha Christie, Amnon Kabatchnik, Arsene Lupin, Arsene Lupin vs Sherlock Holmes, Arthur Conan Doyle, Basil Rathbone, Beryl Stapleton, Blood On The Stage, Books, Broadway, characters, Charles H.F. Brookfield, Charles Marowitz, Charles P Rice, Chekhov, Clay Stafford, Conan Doyle, Crime and Suspense, Dorothy L Sayers, Dr. John Watson, Dr. Watson, drama, eccentric, Edgar Wallace, Ellery Queen, Erle Stanley Gardner, femme fatale, Forrester, Frankenstein, Frankenstein monster, French adventurer, George Ashiotis, Great Detective, guest bloggers, Ibsen, John Arthur Fraser, Judd Woldin, Killer Nashville, Killer Nashville 2013, Killer Nashville writers conference, Langdon McCormick, life-or-death, Lillian Hellman, London's Royal Court Theatre, Mary Morstan, Mrs. Hudson, Murder in Baker Street, New Century Theatre, Ouida, Professor Moriarty, Readers, Reichenbach Falls, Rex Stout, S.S. Van Dine, Sax Rohmer, Series, Seymour Hicks, Shaw, Sherlock, Sherlock Holmes, Sherlock Holmes on the Stage, Sherlock's Last Case, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir Charles, Sir Henry, sleuth, SS Van Dine, strong plot, Tennessee Williams, The Burglar, The Burglar and the Lady, The Final Problem, The Hound of the Baskervilles, The Sign of Four, Theatre by the Blind, Tim Kelly, Under the Clock, Watson
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