Publisher's Synopsis
In The Not-So-Very-Nice Goings-On at Victoria Lodge, Philip Ardagh took illustrations from The Girl's Own Paper of the 1890s and used them to tell a brand new tale of (unlikely) intrigue, with hilarious results. Now he's at it again, but this time withthe original Sherlock Holmes illustrations from The Strand Magazine, to bring The Silly Side of Sherlock Holmes tobathrooms across the nation. A true Sherlock Holmes fan since age nine,Philip Ardaghowns a variety of strange editions of the original canon, includingone in Pitman's shorthand English. He'salways felt that Holmes's humorous side has been largelyignored. The Silly Side of Sherlock Holmesdoes nothing to redress the balance.It's a shameless piece of frivolous fun, which, under test conditions,produced everything from suppressed chortles to out and out guffaws. Ideal for everyone from Sherlock Holmes fans to people who quite like reading silly captions. Sometimes. Praise for The Not-So-Very-Nice Goings-On at Victoria Lodge "I love [it]. Utterly ridiculous, which I mean as a compliment û itÆs like Edward Gorey, only cheating a bit because someone else has done the illustrations.Æ The Bookseller "[A] laudable example of that brave dying breed ù the Christmas humour book that has nothing to do with television, magazines or politics.' The Sunday Times "a very strange book indeed. . ." Mariella Frostrup Open Book