Citations:Sherlockiana

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English citations of Sherlockiana

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1954 1982 1998 2002 2005 2007 2009 2010 2011
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  • 1954, Nathan L. Bengis, "Why I Collect Sherlockiana", Hobbies, Volume 59, Issue 1, page 126:
    I collect Sherlockiana first and foremost because I am a Sherlock Holmes bug.
  • 1982, Biochemistry Collections, a Cross-disciplinary Survey of the Literature (ed. Bernard S. Schlessinger), Psychology Press (1982), →ISBN, page 119:
    Well, at any rate Ronald Burt DeWall has compiled a companion volume to The World Bibliography of Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson, 1887-1971, the new volume providing complete listings, with annotations or descriptions, of Sherlockiana appearing from even before 1971 to 1978.
  • 1998, Ann E. Barron & Karen S. Ivers, The Internet and Instruction: Activities and Ideas, Libraries Unlimited (1998), →ISBN, page 152:
    The Web site is maintained by Chris Redmond, University of Waterloo, author of several books about Sherlockiana.
  • 2002, Christopher Redmond, "Sherlock Holmes on the Internet", in Murder, My Dear Watson: New Tales of Sherlock Holmes (eds. John Lellenberg, Daniel Stashower, & Martin H. Greenberg), Carroll & Graf Publishers (2003), →ISBN, page 212:
    But there are large parts of Sherlockiana not directly related to the stories, such as pastiches, films, cartoons, societies, and so on.
  • 2005, Mary Ellen Snodgrass, Encyclopedia of Gothic Literature, Facts On File (2005), →ISBN, page 86:
    As a whole, Sherlockiana was popular because it stressed such outré elements as rare poisons, unusual tobacco, cryptic messages, fake beards, a family curse, []
  • 2007, Howard Burman, Paradise by Paradise, iUniverse (2007), →ISBN, unnumbered page:
    McCutcheon has built up a small but extensive collection of Sherlockiana headed by a copy of Beeton's 1887 Christmas Annual, the publication in which Sherlock Holmes made his debut.
  • 2009, Martin Dunford, The Rough Guide to New York City, Rough Guides (2009), →ISBN, unnumbered page:
    The shop sells mysteries of every kind, from classic detectives to just-published titles, and also trades in some first editions and "Sherlockiana."
  • 2009, Susanna Fullerton, Brief Encounters: Literary Travellers in Australia 1836-1939, Picador (2009), →ISBN, page 267:
    Sherlock Holmes is celebrated universally as the world's greatest detective—film, theatre, cartoons, radio, sequels, prequels, pastiches, adaptations, imitations, Sherlockiana of all descriptions, and the canon itself, ensure that he is alive and well today.
  • 2009, Janet Husband & Jonathan F. Husband, Sequels: An Annotated Guide to Novels in Series, American Library Association (2009), →ISBN, page 235:
    Sherlock Holmes has achieved mythic status with countless reprintings; a vast literature devoted to Sherlockiana; []
  • 2009, Astrid Britt Krautschneider, "Barbie, Ken...and Blaine?", in Victims & Villains: Barbie and Ken Meet Sherlock Holmes (ed. Derham Groves), Ramble House (2009), →ISBN, page 10:
    There is any number of Sherlock Holmes societies around the planet to choose from, and there is an almost endless array of memorabilia (or Sherlockiana) avaiable for his hoards of adoring fans to collect.
  • 2010, Steven Doyle & David A. Crowder, Sherlock Holmes for Dummies, Wiley (2010), →ISBN, unnumbered page:
    This essay first appeared in Baker Street Studies, a book of Sherlockiana by H. W. Bell, []
  • 2011, Dan Andriacco, Baker Street Beat: An Eclectic Collection of Sherlockian Scribblings, MX Publishing (2011), →ISBN, unnumbered page:
    The upstairs of the building is given over to art exhibitions, the bottom to Sherlockiana.
  • 2011, Robin James, "The performance of power", in Time Out London Walks: 30 Walks by London Writers, Volume 1 (ed. Cath Phillips), Time Out Guides (2011), →ISBN, page 30:
    On the ground floor there is a good collection of Sherlockiana. This includes the face-mask used for the Hound of the Baskervilles in the 1960s Hammer movie, complete with phosphorescent paint.