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e-Book Against the Brotherhood: A Mycroft Holmes Novel (Mycroft Holmes Novels) download

e-Book Against the Brotherhood: A Mycroft Holmes Novel (Mycroft Holmes Novels) download

by Quinn Fawcett

ISBN: 0812545230
ISBN13: 978-0812545234
Language: English
Publisher: Tor Books; 1st edition (October 15, 1998)
Category: Mystery
Subategory: Thriller

ePub size: 1252 kb
Fb2 size: 1973 kb
DJVU size: 1720 kb
Rating: 4.5
Votes: 210
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Mycroft Holmes is a mystery novel by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Anna Waterhouse.

Mycroft Holmes is a mystery novel by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Anna Waterhouse. It involves Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's character of Mycroft Holmes, the older brother of Sherlock Holmes, solving a mystery early in his career as a government official. It is Abdul-Jabbar's first adult novel

Against The Brotherhood", the first novel in Fawcett's series, also introduces the reader to Mycroft's capable secretary Paterson . Quinn Fawcett has begun a series of books relating to Mycroft Holmes, the older and more intelligent brother of the better known Sherlock.

Against The Brotherhood", the first novel in Fawcett's series, also introduces the reader to Mycroft's capable secretary Paterson Guthrie, his worthy houseman Philip Tyers and a stimulating new cast of characters and villains that is worthy both of the Conan Doyle family endorsement and the regard and enjoyment of the millions of faithful Sherlock devotees.

Теперь обратимся к сериям про Майкрофта Холмса. Henry Fitzgerald Heard (1889-1971), commonly called Gerald Heard, was an historian, science writer, educator, and philosopher. He wrote many articles and authored over 35 books

Теперь обратимся к сериям про Майкрофта Холмса. He wrote many articles and authored over 35 books. 01. A Taste for Honey (A Taste for Murder) (1941) 02. Reply Paid (1942).

Bibliographic Details. Title: Against the Brotherhood: A Mycroft Holmes. Book Condition: LikeNew

Bibliographic Details. Book Condition: LikeNew. Quinn Fawcett is the author of a number of mystery novels, including a series about Mycroft Holmes, older brother of the famous Sherlock (Embassy Row, The Flying Scotsman, and more) and a series detailing the espionage adventures of Ian Fleming (including Death to Spies and Siren Song).

Tell us if something is incorrect. Against the Brotherhood : A Mycroft Holmes Novel. We aim to show you accurate product information. Manufacturers, suppliers and others provide what you see here, and we have not verified it. See our disclaimer.

Acknowledged by Sherlock Holmes himself as being gifted with even greater powers of observation than that famous consulting detective, Mycroft Holmes appears in only four stories in the Canon and remains an enigmatic figure. As Sherlock tells Watson, his brother is more than an agent of Her Majesty’s government-for all practical purposes, Mycroft is the government.

Find books like Against the Brotherhood (Mycroft Holmes, from the world’s largest community of readers. Acknowledged by Sherlock Holmes himself as the smarter brother, and gifted with even greater powers of observation than the famous consulting detective, Mycroft Holmes appears in only four stories i. ore. Shelve Against the Brotherhood (Mycroft Holmes, Want to Read.

Mycroft Holmes’ face was slightly darkened and his brows had been blackened; his turban successfully concealed his graying hair.

You can read book Against the Brotherhood by Chelsea Quinn Yarbro in our library for absolutely free. Mycroft Holmes’ face was slightly darkened and his brows had been blackened; his turban successfully concealed his graying hair. With Herr Dortmunder standing in the parlor, I had to bluster my way through. To you it may be, I declared in English, and then repeated it in German far better than his had been. You are not German? asked Mycroft Holmes, still using his ludicrous accent. English, I declared, feeling at once very foolish and in extreme danger.

Acknowledged by Sherlock Holmes himself as the smarter brother, and gifted with even greater powers of observation than the famous consulting detective, Mycroft Holmes appears in only four stories in the Canon and remains an enigmatic figure wrapped in the mysteries of international politics and conspiracies.Now, in Against the Brotherhood, we learn of Mycroft's secrets throught the eyes of his new secretary, Patterson Guthrie, Guthrie's upper-class education has not prepared him for the rought-and-tumble world of international politics, nor for his encounters with the beautiful and cunning Miss Gatspy, thief, spy, assassin--whatever the situation calls for. Mycroft is revealed to be a vigorous playre at world politics and international skulduggery. Against the Brotherhood is full of attempted assassinations, secret spymasters, anarchist cabals, concealed identities, double- and triple-agents, burglary, and sabotage, all done in true Conan Doyle style.
Comments:
Nnulam
Mycroft Holmes is a interesting character with mysterious co characters. A creative tale.

Priotian
I've always wondered about Mycroft Holmes, Sherlock Holmes's mysterious sibling. He appeared only in a few of Conan Doyle's stories and (if I remember correctly) made an appearance in Nicholas Meyer's "The Seven Percent Solution". However, until now, Mycroft has remained largely in the background, a figure on the periphery of Sherlock's better-documented exploits.
Fortunately for us, author Quinn Fawcett, with endorsement by none other than Dame Jean Conan Doyle herself, has fashioned a new crime series which pulls Mycroft from the shadows and into his rightful place in detective fiction. "Against The Brotherhood", the first novel in Fawcett's series, also introduces the reader to Mycroft's capable secretary Paterson Guthrie, his worthy houseman Philip Tyers and a stimulating new cast of characters and villains that is worthy both of the Conan Doyle family endorsement and the regard and enjoyment of the millions of faithful Sherlock devotees.
In "Against The Brotherhood", Mycroft and Guthrie find themselves pitted against a mysterious, blood-thirsty organization of ruthless men, set on destroying the world's great governments through various underhanded, clandestine and (quite often) murderous and bloody methods. The novel contains many hair-raising moments, as Mycroft sends Guthrie undercover to penetrate the mysterious "Brotherhood" and, in so doing, puts his secretary's life at stake for, if Guthrie's real identity is discovered by the very group he is trying to infiltrate, they will stop at nothing to silence him - forever, and in VERY nasty ways.
In fashioning Mycroft Holmes (who has sometimes been called "Sherlock's smarter brother"), Fawcett gives us not so much a smarter sibling (for to be sure, brains run in that family in spades) but a "kinder, gentler" sibling. He is brilliant without his brother's arrogance, and more human. There is far less of Sherlock's chilly remoteness, and one senses that Mycroft is psychologically better-adjusted than his brother, who has many inner demons driving him. The two, when compared together, make a stimulating contrast.
Likewise, Guthrie is no Watson, although he, like Watson, faithfully records the exploits of his employer. Each of Guthrie's chapters is capped by an entry from Tyers's private diary, which provides extra information about the main plot while spinning a side plot concerning the approaching death of Tyers's elderly mother. Guthrie is a courageous character, willing to do more than what's required of him and able to stand his ground in a tight spot. And there are plenty of those in "Against The Brotherhood".
I've just started the second Mycroft Holmes novel, "Embassy Row", fast on the heels of completing this one, and I'm finding that situations, characters and references carry over from one novel to the next. Therefore, I believe it would be best to begin this series at the beginning, with "Against The Brotherhood", in order to follow the references to past exploits that will be made in future novels.
I definitely feel that Sherlock Holmes fans will appreciate the new focus on his brother, Mycroft, and Quinn Fawcett has done an excellent job in breathing life into a little-known literary creation. I highly recommend this admirable and fun-to-read series.

Kieel
Quinn Fawcett has begun a series of books relating to Mycroft Holmes, the older and more intelligent brother of the better known Sherlock. Mycroft has been a figure of fascination since he first appeared in 'The Adventure of the Greek Interpreter' in 1893, and has often been featured in stories as the man behind the Victorian British secret service.
Mr. Fawcett also takes this view. He also endeavours to retain Mycroft's depiction as an armchair theorist, although not to the extent that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle did, the depiction is at least fairly consistent (unlike, for instance, the depiction in Glen Petrie's 'The Hampstead Poisonings').
It is therefore unsurprising to find that the book is largely narrated in the first person by Mycroft's secretary, Paterson Erskine Guthrie, who is also Mycroft's agent in the field. While Mycroft eventually follows Guthrie into the field later in the novel (and there is an excellent explanation of why no-one notices this), Guthrie is principally in the spotlight, and thus preserving the wonder of his employer's intelligence - much as Dr. Watson does in the Sherlock Holmes stories.
Holmes and Guthrie are pitted against the Brotherhood, a secret society who have plans against the many governments of Europe, who are a very nasty bunch.
While spy thrillers are not normally a genre of choice for me, this book was quite an entertaining read. And if you enjoy this, there are another three books (at least!) in the series.

Inabel
This is a book of extremes, some good, some bad, and some just plain ridiculous. These extremes combine to make it rather bland overall.

In the positive category, the author does a great job of recreating the Victorian Era. The plot is also good. While not original, the idea of having secret societies controlling European politics behind the scenes is just the kind of plot gimmick to appeal to conspiracy theorists and make for an interesting story. My favorite aspect of Against the Brotherhood was the way the narrator acknowledged that killing someone, even when necessary or in self-defense, disgusts a sensitive person and damages his soul. It's rare to find a book that honestly deals with the damaging effects killing has on the psyche of the killer.

In the negative category, the book is touted as "A Mycroft Holmes Novel" on the cover, but he's really a supporting character. The main character is his secretary, Patterson Guthrie, who narrates the story while undertaking a secret mission for Holmes on the Continent to make sure an important treaty gets to England.

Mycroft only becomes a major character in the second half of the book, during which he pulls strings, advises Guthrie, and assumes disguises and fake accents. This reminded me of The Hound of the Baskervilles, in which Sherlock Holmes is absent for 40% of the story while John Watson reports on his own activities in the field, with Holmes turning up for the climax and conclusion of the book.

Brotherhood also has a subplot about the mother of Mycroft's valet being on her deathbed. This is referred to so frequently I thought sure it would turn out to have some relevance to the rest of the story, but it doesn't. Apparently it was only stuck in to show the reader what a great guy Mycroft is for allowing his servant to take lots of time off to be with his dying mother. That may have been a remarkable concession in the Victorian Era, but to a modern reader it just seems like common decency, and therefore silly to make such a big deal out of it.

The biggest problem with this book is that Mycroft is such a complete Gary Stu. Sherlock Holmes is the best-loved character in fiction because he's so *real*. Sure, he's a brilliant, witty, super-competent Renaissance man, but he's also mercurial, self-destructive, and something of a jerk, especially in the stories before "The Final Problem." And for all his posturing about being a "thinking machine," his intense emotions are frequently discernible to the reader.

Mycroft Holmes is also a brilliant, super-competent Renaissance man (although he's not particularly witty, and in this book he's not self-destructive), but he's so laid-back as to be phlegmatic. This is carried to such a ludicrous extreme that he remains utterly unflappable even during a series of life-threatening crises in the last few chapters of the book. He also is just as great an actor, and just as much a man of action, as Sherlock is at his best.

In the most ridiculous Gary Stu scene of all, Mycroft carries a severely injured man over his shoulder for what must be at least two miles. (The good guys had walked briskly for over half an hour from where they left their horses to reach the castle they attacked.) This would be an extremely difficult feat even for a young, healthy man in perfect training; for a middle-aged, morbidly obese couch potato like Mycroft, it would bring on a heart attack, stroke, or both. This reminded me of a similarly absurd scene in another Sherlockian pastiche, The Beekeeper's Apprentice, in which a teenaged Mary Russell cracks a bone in her foot rescuing a little girl. Then she climbs down a tree and runs several blocks, all while carrying the child, and despite her injured foot. Preposterous!

I guess--oops, sorry, Sherlock--I *deduce* we're supposed to believe Mycroft is just husky rather than fat, but in the Sherlock Holmes story, "The Greek Interpreter," he is described by the physician narrator as "absolutely corpulent," and having "a broad, fat hand like the flipper of a seal." That's not the description of a man who is big and muscular, but of one who is morbidly obese.

Worst of all for the book, the most interesting character by far is not one of the principals, but an assassin from a rival cabal who unites with Holmes and Guthrie to help them defeat the bad guys. I'm being deliberately vague so as not to give anything away, but I found this person far more intriguing and exciting than any of the major characters. The conclusion is set up so this person can return in future novels, but it would have been a far more interesting book if that character had been the main one in the first place. Then the tale could have been about how this person became an assassin, and the character's adventures as a member of this secret organization. In other words, Fawcett committed the novelist's cardinal sin of creating a supporting character who is more interesting than his main characters.

This is not a bad book, but it's not all that great, either. I recommend checking it out of the library or buying it cheap used. I give it two-and-a-half stars.

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