コナン・ドイル未刊の処女小説「ジョン・スミスの物語」<br>The Narrative of John Smith

コナン・ドイル未刊の処女小説「ジョン・スミスの物語」
The Narrative of John Smith

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 138 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780712358415
  • DDC分類 823.8

基本説明

This is the first novel Conan Doyle ever wrote and only now published for the first time.

Full Description


Arthur Conan Doyle wrote The Narrative of John Smith in 1883 when he was just 23, living in Portsmouth and struggling to establish himself as a doctor and a writer. By that time he had succeeded in getting a number of short stories published in leading magazines of the day, such as Blackwood's, All the Year Round, London Society and the Boy's Own Paper. But, as was the accepted practice of literary journals of the time, his stories were published anonymously and Conan Doyle realised that to make his name as a writer he would have to write a novel. That novel, the first he ever wrote, and published here for the first time, is The Narrative of John Smith. More a string of ruminations than a novel, it is however of considerable biographical importance and has exceptional value as a window into the mind of the creator of Sherlock Holmes. Many of the themes and tropes of his later writing, including his first Sherlock Holmes story A Study in Scarlet (published in 1887), can be clearly seen.Via the protagonist, John Smith, a 50-year-old man confined to his room by an attack of gout, Conan Doyle sets down his thoughts and opinions on a range of subjects - literature, science, religion, war, education - with no detectable shyness or diffidence, full of bravado in the face of little professional success at that time. Although it has little in the way of plot it stands as a fascinating record of an early attempt at writing by a man who was on his way to being one of the best-known authors in the world.

Contents

Extract from Chapter Iof both Mr. Smith,' said he. 'And pray, sir, what is the exact difference between them?' I continued under a natural impulse to gain a little knowledge in exchange for the red-hot skewer which was transfixing my right foot. 'Why,' said my good physician, tapping his tortoise-shell snuff box, 'the one is a punishment and the other is a misfortune - one is in the hands of Providence and the other in your own. You can't command the weather which governs your rheumatism, but you can command your appetites which govern your gout.' 'And so,' said I, 'this diabolical pain in my foot is the hybrid form of torture known as rheumatic gout which unites the disadvantages of both diseases to a dash of malignancy all its own.' [you can cut this short if it works better]

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