The Complete Sherlock Holmes (Collection of all his adventures, 9 Volumes in one Book)
The Complete Sherlock Holmes (Collection of all his adventures, 9 Volumes in one Book) Review
Special price available at Amazon 
Do it yourself: 5 stars
This issue: 4.75 stars
I love this book in every aspect. I have a couple of abdominal pain with this problem myself, and I list below.
– The same output is heard … Fragile – No breaks or anything, but it feels great too:)
– I do not know how the color scheme on the front
– The cover is like all the other jackets: boring.
The book is revolutionary, but exceptional in every way. If youI have not read, it is necessary.
Total: 5 stars. Do not let my complaints stop you from buying this problem is the best around.
The Complete Sherlock Holmes (Collection of all his adventures, 9 Volumes in one Book) Overview
All nine volumes of Sir Arthur Conan Doyles works with the world’s best known detective compiled in one big book. This means that you will find all sixty stories that Doyle ever wrote with Holmes as protagonist in this compilation. Save about 50% compared to the single volumes and take all the stories with you in one file.
The Complete Sherlock Holmes (Collection of all his adventures, 9 Volumes in one Book) Specifications
This volume, authorized by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s estate, contains all 4 full-length novels and all 56 short stories featuring Sherlock Holmes. At over a thousand pages, the weighty tome is a perfect gift for budding amateur sleuths, and it is an ideal companion for a long stay on a desert island (or a leisurely trip through the English countryside). As the reader wades past the tense introductions of A Study in Scarlet and moves towards such classic tales as The Hound of the Baskervilles, “The Adventure of the Speckled Band,” and “The Final Problem,” she is sure to draw her own conclusions about Holmes’s veiled past and his quirky relationship with his “Boswell,” Watson. Doyle never revealed much about Holmes’s early life, but the joy of reading the complete Holmes is assembling the trivia of each story into something like a portrait of the detective and his creator. By the end of the long journey through London and across Europe (with a long stopover at Reichenbach Falls), one is apt to have found a friend for life. –Patrick O’Kelley
