Holmes is the greatest protagonist in all of English literature. Brilliantly read. These stories are my constant companion in my right ear while I work (safely).
Am reading "The Extroardinary Cases of Sherlock Holmes", and it's a bit difficult for me (I'm 13 years old, and 15 years old in my country (Korea). But I can understand better by listening to this audio and read it myself. It's a bit slow, so I hear this in 1.25x. Thank you for uploading such a good reading of the story!
This is awesome!!! I learned French that way. I was expecting I'd more grammar lesson, but turns out, listening to someone actually speaking the language does wonders. There's a lot of instinctual learning, you'll soon find yourself more and more comfortable with realizing "this doesn't sound right but THAT does." Good luck and, most importantly, have fun 🎉📖
Some readers have claimed that Doyle "never" explained what Sherlock's hair color was but he DID right in the beginning, "Like a strange lank bird with dull gray plumage and a black top-knot." so the debate is settled. Holmes had black hair. There are also references to him having black eyebrows in other stories. So, Doyle did give us clues, he just didn't directly spell it out. Thank you for settling this years-old debate!
@@shlosher no, it meant that he was midlle aged, and started to be bald on the vertex. The deerstalker was introduced to hide that the first actor who played Sherlock had to much hair.
Thanks for this channel, makes my commuting to work more enjoyable and less stressful. ❤ it is very well read, clearly to understand for a non native English speaker.
I always love how civilized the scenes are when Sherlock speaks with his captured assailant. The person gets handcuffed, sits on a chair, and then they have a sophisticated conversation about the crime in its “naked truth.”
Colonel Sebastian Moran wasn't so gentlemanly about it all when he was finally caught (The Empty room) "at least there can be no reason why I should submit to the gibes of this person"
Love this story. One of the first Basil Rathbone films I was exposed to was based on this story. I was already in love with the canonical Holmes and Watson. Rathbone and Bruce are still my favorite duo. Thank you for this. Cheers
I have not seen this on film. I hope to find it. I too love Rathbone and Bruce. I can tolerate Howard but he lends a sweetness that just does not fit Holmes. This reader does a fabulous job of it.
@@sherlock_holmes_magpie_audio The Actor who sometimes plays Holmes. I went back and checked. It's Greg Wagland. He's a favorite! Sometimes listen in the wee hrs of the morn when I cannot sleep, so my mind is,a but dulled. Otherwise I would have realized.
@@sherlock_holmes_magpie_audio I think the reference is to Ronald Howard (son of Leslie Howard), who played Holmes in a 1950's television series. I agree his portrayal is endearing in a way, but not one that is compliant to it's literary canon...at least in my opinion. Your Holmes, Mr. Wagland is right up there with Jeremy Brett. I think this Granada series came closest to Conan Doyle's stories.
@@granny13ad33 I think the Rathbone/Bruce reference is to 'Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon' ...uses the premise of the 'dancing men' as code, but that's where the original parallel to this story ends. th-cam.com/video/kYoerEu-_yI/w-d-xo.html
I love his disguises, and his ability to study people, he is constantly learning more and more by asking questions, if he doesn’t know how some normal thing was achieved! His analytical mind is constantly switched on! How these were written is sheer brilliance!! There is nothing the like of them, before, or since!!
Sherlock Holmes Stories Magpie Audio i can’t believe i’m actually talking to someone in England. i know that sounds absurd now, but i grew up with dial phones, black and white tv (or telly as you guys call it) and like, you know - books! :) i woke up early. it’s 6:15 here in New York. have a great day, really. :} 🌷
Hi Alexa 👋 I read your message and thought you might enjoy a "G'day" from Australia. Things have certainly taken a turn for the worst since you wrote this. I hope you have,and continue to have, good health. Best wishes
@@markvines7308 Hi Mark - i love Australia! you guys are so real - easy to relate to. I've seen cooking shows and lately been watching Bondi Vet for a a number of months, learned a lot, fell in love with Tazzies (they are so cute. i didn't know they were small.), found out about all the terrible snakes, insects, sea animals - scary. but everyone seems to be alive and kicking LOL. i was worried about all the animals when there were all those brush fires. - i've been trying to 'get' the Australian accent and i think i have ee and i sound. thanks for writing and you and yours keep safe, too. your gov't is obviously doing a good job (as opposed to our orange idiot. i can't wait til November!!) :}
He puts no personal connection to the victim and only shows this emotions which are necessary. And yes, he has seen enough murders and other frightening things that have hardened his nerve. This is why he's a great investigator (besides his skills in deduction, obviously).
Ok, but WHY Watson's checkbook is locked in Holmes's drawer. I will certainly not be surprised if Watson casually refers to "our bedroom" in the next story.
Watson's got his vices. he's admitted to them before. "And other vices when I am well", we know he plays pool so wouldn't be surprised if he plays cards, too. he also likes to indulge in Turkish baths etc and he seems to have been married more than once. It's safe to say that Watson is a social butterfly who probably spends a little too much on frivolities. If I had a friend who was less prodigal and more austere than me, I'd probably get them to lock away my debit card too.. I'm a gremlin for books and strange objects, I need someone like that. 😂
Suicide attempt, though it's scattered throughout the story rather than clearly spelled out all at once. Hilton and Slaney fire on each other; Hilton misses, Slaney doesn't. Elsie closes the window shutters on instinct as Slaney flees, then shoots herself with her husband's gun once she sees that he's dead. Remember that there were two shots fired from Hilton's gun, which is what originally led the police inspector to believe that the incident was a murder-suicide between husband and wife alone.
Doyle’s favorite fallback catchall word seems to be “singular,” which he uses to mean unique or only or sometimes rare or sometimes unusual or sometimes special or anything else he wants it to mean. It’s lazy writing and drives me crazy.
Would you like to do a little venture out of the ACD and into the Stephen King novel It's called the doctor's case and it's a good little story about the Sherlock Holmes and Watson
For the judgemental: my favorite quote from Simone de Beauvoir. “All women think that they are different and that there are things that they would never do and all women are wrong.” Best to exercise caution.
Mmm...I agree she should have been completely honest with the ugly truth, but that may not have saved him from a deadly confrontation. Certainly not guilty enough to be hung.
I love it when the client is like, “I’m not a good story teller , but let me pontificate upon my recent woes “. 😂
Very true!
Hhhh i had the same thought 😂
LOL! I thought the same thing. Not quite so eloquently, but I thought it. 😄
Yep it is
L0L ikr... funny
Holmes is the greatest protagonist in all of English literature. Brilliantly read. These stories are my constant companion in my right ear while I work (safely).
Cheers peach
I am amused to read that I am not the only insomniac who enjoys listening to these wonderful Sherlock Holmes adventures that are so well read!
Yet another of Greg's silver-toned narrations that turn sleepless night into sheer bliss.
For a sec I thought you where talking about listrade however you’re talking abour the reader!!!
Yes they do! Sherlock is one of my very favourite characters and stories!!
Yup. That's why I'm here
Yes he has a marvelous voice and cadence to it
Am reading "The Extroardinary Cases of Sherlock Holmes", and it's a bit difficult for me (I'm 13 years old, and 15 years old in my country (Korea). But I can understand better by listening to this audio and read it myself. It's a bit slow, so I hear this in 1.25x. Thank you for uploading such a good reading of the story!
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed it. 1.25x - great idea!
This is awesome!!! I learned French that way. I was expecting I'd more grammar lesson, but turns out, listening to someone actually speaking the language does wonders.
There's a lot of instinctual learning, you'll soon find yourself more and more comfortable with realizing "this doesn't sound right but THAT does."
Good luck and, most importantly, have fun 🎉📖
Good stuff, love young people intrested in shelock.
나는 한국어를 공부하러 한국어로 쓴 셜록홈즈책 생일선물로 받았어. 좀 어려운데 재미있어. 화이팅!
Some readers have claimed that Doyle "never" explained what Sherlock's hair color was but he DID right in the beginning, "Like a strange lank bird with dull gray plumage and a black top-knot." so the debate is settled. Holmes had black hair. There are also references to him having black eyebrows in other stories. So, Doyle did give us clues, he just didn't directly spell it out. Thank you for settling this years-old debate!
Fully agree
Does this mean he had a top-knot? Like a man-bun?
@@shlosheras funny as that would be I don’t think so
🥳🙋🏼♀😘
@@shlosher
no, it meant that he was midlle aged, and started to be bald on the vertex. The deerstalker was introduced to hide that the first actor who played Sherlock had to much hair.
Thanks for this channel, makes my commuting to work more enjoyable and less stressful. ❤ it is very well read, clearly to understand for a non native English speaker.
I always love how civilized the scenes are when Sherlock speaks with his captured assailant. The person gets handcuffed, sits on a chair, and then they have a sophisticated conversation about the crime in its “naked truth.”
Picture that happening today!
And also "That's it, that's everything, the God's honest truth."
Colonel Sebastian Moran wasn't so gentlemanly about it all when he was finally caught (The Empty room)
"at least there can be no reason why I should submit to the gibes of this person"
You know what sunday morning bliss is?
Listening to Greg's narration of holmes adventure and a cuppa tea!
Thanks very much greg
Enjoy! A nice cuppa tea - maybe Clipper?
The Dancing Men is what inspired my own interest in ancient coding techniques and cryptography in general.
Love this story. One of the first Basil Rathbone films I was exposed to was based on this story. I was already in love with the canonical Holmes and Watson. Rathbone and Bruce are still my favorite duo. Thank you for this. Cheers
I have not seen this on film. I hope to find it. I too love Rathbone and Bruce. I can tolerate Howard but he lends a sweetness that just does not fit Holmes. This reader does a fabulous job of it.
Howard?
@@sherlock_holmes_magpie_audio The Actor who sometimes plays Holmes. I went back and checked. It's Greg Wagland. He's a favorite! Sometimes listen in the wee hrs of the morn when I cannot sleep, so my mind is,a but dulled. Otherwise I would have realized.
@@sherlock_holmes_magpie_audio I think the reference is to Ronald Howard (son of Leslie Howard), who played Holmes in a 1950's television series. I agree his portrayal is endearing in a way, but not one that is compliant to it's literary canon...at least in my opinion. Your Holmes, Mr. Wagland is right up there with Jeremy Brett. I think this Granada series came closest to Conan Doyle's stories.
@@granny13ad33 I think the Rathbone/Bruce reference is to 'Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon' ...uses the premise of the 'dancing men' as code, but that's where the original parallel to this story ends.
th-cam.com/video/kYoerEu-_yI/w-d-xo.html
MAN, that was a good one! Although, I feel bad for those simply listening to the audiobook without the visual aid of the dancing men. XD
Dances YMCA 😃😃
this is making reading during quarantine so much easier, thanks Mr Greg Man
Fascinating! Fun puzzle to unravel. Of course the reader again is exquisite! Thank you!
Best narrator ever
Always enjoyable. I love listening to Sherlock Holmes exercising mindfulness.
Thank you, you read these wonderfully!
I love his disguises, and his ability to study people, he is constantly learning more and more by asking questions, if he doesn’t know how some normal thing was achieved! His analytical mind is constantly switched on! How these were written is sheer brilliance!! There is nothing the like of them, before, or since!!
Intriguing narrative and masterful reading. Thank you sir.
So good! So appreciated.
Thank you Elizebeth.
Thanks for the upload
Excellent story. Thank you for the presentation.
Glad you enjoyed it!
"A strange, lank bird" is up there with "A cockatoo of a man", as far as Arthur Conan Doyle's ornithological comparisons go.
🥳
Excellent... Thank you!
Glad you enjoyed it!
It's a good one, and the way he breaks the cypher is bang on.
Thank you!
Thanks for sharing Sherlock story😍😍😍
Many thanks, Magpie. :)
Cheers again - moviemad56
Amazing Reader!!
Cheers Itz NeRo
The half English, half American accent is so funny XD
Glad you liked it!
@@sherlock_holmes_magpie_audio I love it, wish you the best for the year 2020
They are very enjoyable stories and very well read 😊
Glad you like them!
Thank you for these….please keep doing it!🙏🏻🇺🇸
Will do!
I am a fan of Sherlock Holmes stories
Love the narration. Thanks
Thank you
Awesome
He's not rich but he has at least six farmlads at his disposal...
Six farmlads, eh? Riches to some perhaps.
I traveled England many years ago and spent 2 weeks in North Walsham....loved it!
Great place!
Great
great american accent :} not easy to do.
wonderful reading as usual 😏🌷
not my favorite story. :/
Cheers Alexa
Sherlock Holmes Stories Magpie Audio
i can’t believe i’m actually talking to someone in England. i know that sounds absurd now, but i grew up with dial phones, black and white tv (or telly as you guys call it) and like, you know - books! :)
i woke up early. it’s 6:15 here in New York.
have a great day, really. :} 🌷
Hi Alexa 👋
I read your message and thought you might enjoy a "G'day" from Australia. Things have certainly taken a turn for the worst since you wrote this. I hope you have,and continue to have, good health. Best wishes
@@markvines7308 Hi Mark - i love Australia! you guys are so real - easy to relate to. I've seen cooking shows and lately been watching Bondi Vet for a a number of months, learned a lot, fell in love with Tazzies (they are so cute. i didn't know they were small.), found out about all the terrible snakes, insects, sea animals - scary. but everyone seems to be alive and kicking LOL. i was worried about all the animals when there were all those brush fires. - i've been trying to 'get' the Australian accent and i think i have ee and i sound. thanks for writing and you and yours keep safe, too. your gov't is obviously doing a good job (as opposed to our orange idiot. i can't wait til November!!) :}
@@feralbluee Greetings from New Zealand.
I just don't get how he forgets all about his client who died and heads to Baker Street to have his dinner 😂
Well he has seen murders oftentimes so not so disturbing for him
He puts no personal connection to the victim and only shows this emotions which are necessary. And yes, he has seen enough murders and other frightening things that have hardened his nerve. This is why he's a great investigator (besides his skills in deduction, obviously).
lol your obviously wrong were you not listening when homes received the news of his clients death? It’s ok to feel mate 😂
😘🥳🙋🏼♀
What's the correct pronunciation, Lestraad or Lestraid? In the TV series they say Lestraid but here it's read as lestraad
I've never been sure, but decided to attempt to be consistent with Lestraad. I'm sure someone knows definitively.
Jeremy Brett used to pronounce it differently depending on how he felt about the inspector
Ok, but WHY Watson's checkbook is locked in Holmes's drawer. I will certainly not be surprised if Watson casually refers to "our bedroom" in the next story.
There are surprises around every corner!
Watson's got his vices. he's admitted to them before. "And other vices when I am well", we know he plays pool so wouldn't be surprised if he plays cards, too. he also likes to indulge in Turkish baths etc and he seems to have been married more than once. It's safe to say that Watson is a social butterfly who probably spends a little too much on frivolities. If I had a friend who was less prodigal and more austere than me, I'd probably get them to lock away my debit card too..
I'm a gremlin for books and strange objects, I need someone like that. 😂
Ok but how'd the lady get shot?
Tom de Kler
I wonder too.
Suicide attempt, though it's scattered throughout the story rather than clearly spelled out all at once. Hilton and Slaney fire on each other; Hilton misses, Slaney doesn't. Elsie closes the window shutters on instinct as Slaney flees, then shoots herself with her husband's gun once she sees that he's dead. Remember that there were two shots fired from Hilton's gun, which is what originally led the police inspector to believe that the incident was a murder-suicide between husband and wife alone.
Self inflicted
Self pepsi
Thank you!! Nuff said :)
He is the best 😊
Not an honourable lady at all and it cost her husband his life.
Forgot to say, shame we don’t ever get to know what he dreamed of!!
i don't understand why Doyle ended this story like he did. :!
Can you recored Agatha Christie poirot books. Please its my humble request.
Doyle’s favorite fallback catchall word seems to be “singular,” which he uses to mean unique or only or sometimes rare or sometimes unusual or sometimes special or anything else he wants it to mean. It’s lazy writing and drives me crazy.
Which non lazy writers do you spend more time listening to?
Would you like to do a little venture out of the ACD and into the Stephen King novel It's called the doctor's case and it's a good little story about the Sherlock Holmes and Watson
Copyright issues, with Stephen, I imagine. Unless he reads this and waives them. ;-)
@@sherlock_holmes_magpie_audio Stephen King isn't a problem cause it's posted on another channel SK audio 😂😂
And I would love to hear you preform it 😂 I think that it would be an extasy 😉😉
Nice ❤
Glad you like it
Now utterly spoilt by far too many adverts.
True. Kind of a blanket opt out innovation from TH-cam and I've now opted out. Thanks for alerting me to it.
When a woman strongly suggests you should not marry her, maybe you should take her advice?
For the judgemental: my favorite quote from Simone de Beauvoir. “All women think that they are different and that there are things that they would never do and all women are wrong.” Best to exercise caution.
...What is that supposed to mean in this context? Or what is the original context? I'm confused.
I expect we're all a bit like that - men and women - but also all a bit unique (though some rather more than others).
Nice quote, though
He reminds me of Jenn ❤😊
Jenn?
Back to reality ❣️.
'The husband she loved and respected'. Hah - like _hell_ she did!
Ha!
????? what in your life made you feel like this? i don't at all. . .
Mmm...I agree she should have been completely honest with the ugly truth, but that may not have saved him from a deadly confrontation. Certainly not guilty enough to be hung.
It was good 👍
I feel like sherlock predicted the coffin dance
Dziękuję
Back to reality ❣️.
12:50
❤❤
That one was especially sad.
Fine American accent.
28:11
Visto 1 /21/20
To funny 😂
14:09
46:17
That damn Rick and their soy lattes are going to get left behind in history not looking very smart 🤓
Conan-Doyle could have made her ‘with child’….
Thank you
Back to reality ❣️.
19:09
Back to reality ❣️.
Back to reality ❣️.
Back to reality ❣️.