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Adult Storytime

Adult Storytime

By Saint Paul Public Library

Short works read aloud to you by Saint Paul Public Library staff.
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"The Horror of the Heights" by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

Adult StorytimeAug 14, 2020

00:00
36:15
"The Horror of the Heights" by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Aug 14, 202036:15
"The York Mystery" by Baroness Emma Orczy, from The Rivals of Sherlock Holmes
Jul 15, 202037:40
"The Coin of Dionysius" by Ernest Bramah from The Rivals of Sherlock Holmes

"The Coin of Dionysius" by Ernest Bramah from The Rivals of Sherlock Holmes

Saint Paul Public Library librarian János reads "The Coin of Dionysius" by Ernest Bramah from The Rivals of Sherlock Holmes.

As the Golden Age of Detective Fiction emerged in the wake of Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories, it behooved authors to distinguish their character both from Holmes and the other crimesolvers proliferating in the pages of magazines.  Ernest Bramah was one of the first to give his character a physical disability.  In this tale he introduces Max Carrados, whose chance encounter with a private inquiry agent is an opportunity to prove that blindness is no impediment, and possibly even an asset, in detective work.

Max Carrados might be literature's first blind sleuth, but what really elevates Ernest Bramah's stories are the humanity with which he imbues the character, and the zingy wit of the writing.

Jul 06, 202032:21
Adult Storytime: The Lenton Croft Robberies

Adult Storytime: The Lenton Croft Robberies

Saint Paul Public Library librarian János reads "The Lenton Croft Robberies" by Arthur Morrison, from The Rivals of Sherlock Holmes.

When Arthur Conan Doyle first began publishing his Sherlock Holmes short stories in 1891, they became an instant hit in Britain and North America.  The popularity grew so overwhelming to Doyle, who feared that the stories were overshadowing his "serious" literary work, that he killed off his own hit character just two years later.  With the public still clamoring for more short crime fiction, a flood of other authors launched their own detective series.  Though little remembered today—particularly since Doyle relented and resurrected Holmes a decade later—many nevertheless remain worthy reads.

One of the first authors to churn out his own series of detective stories was Arthur Morrison.  He deliberately made his character, Martin Hewitt, the opposite of Sherlock Holmes in many respects.  Where Holmes was irascible, hard to deal with, and disparaging of the police, Martin Hewitt is a genial, easygoing fellow who often works closely with authorities.  Unfortunately, this also makes him a rather blander character, but Arthur Morrison makes up for this with really good plots for most of his stories.

Jun 10, 202045:35