Publisher's Synopsis
Silver Blaze The crime here isn't murder, but the obvious robbery of a champion racehorse. The method to how Holmes solves the thriller entails a canine and the infamous circumstances what it did not do during the night time of the horse went missing. The Adventure of the Cardboard Box One of the more grotesque crimes that Holmes is called upon to clear up wherein the titular object contains two severed human ears. The story is simply as much an examination of the corrosive results of sibling rivalry, jealous and a starvation for vengeance as it is a murder thriller. The Adventure of the Yellow Face Notable for being one of the few times wherein the deductive reasoning of Holmes in the end proves wrong. The tale is as an alternative unusual exam of racism fueled by way of a healthful little bit of traditional spousal paranoia. The Adventure of the Stockbroker's Clerk A chronological reading the Holmes memories will unavoidably remind readers of "The Red-Headed League" when they get to this tale that, like the previous classic, revolves round a needlessly complicated plot to do away with an inconvenience to a tried robbery. The Adventure of the Gloria Scott Mainly remarkable for being informed thru the perspective of Holmes himself in preference to Watson and for being a flashback account to the start of his career.