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A Taste for Honey (1941)

par H. F. Heard

Séries: Mr. Mycroft (book 1)

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1704160,234 (3.67)16
In a quiet village far from the noise of Victorian London, Sydney Silchester lives the life of a recluse led by two passions: privacy and honey. He gives up the former only when his stores of the latter run low. But when his honey supplier is found stung to death by her hive, the search for a new beekeeper takes Sydney to Mr. Mycroft, a brilliant man who has retired to Sussex to take up precisely this occupation, and who shares many traits with the great detective, Sherlock Holmes. Upon hearing of the tragic death of the village's other beekeeper, Mycroft, himself no stranger to crime-solving, immediately senses the bloody hand of murder. But what villain would have the mad intelligence to train an army of killer bees? With Sydney at his side, Mycroft embarks on a life-threatening search for the perpetrator of this most diabolical crime.Hailed by author, critic, and famed Sherlock Holmes scholar Christopher Morley as the only worthwhile continuation of the Holmes novels, A Taste for Honey is an engaging and terrifying mystery that proves enjoyable even to those with little to no knowledge of Doyle's characters.… (plus d'informations)
Récemment ajouté parMarthaHudson, Scutter22, DylanMayer, sgalgano, bibliothèque privée, saskia17, Kaitlyn_C, lulaa
Bibliothèques historiquesNewton 'Bud' Flounders, Ernest Hemingway
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Note: I accessed a digital review copy of this book through Edelweiss.
  fernandie | Sep 15, 2022 |
A recluse who really enjoys his honey gets drawn into a murder plot involving killer bees, and also involving his neighbor, an elderly gentleman called "Mr. Mycroft," who keeps bees and who sure talks a lot about crime and deduction.

I'm not entirely sure how well this works as a (coy but obvious) Sherlock Holmes story. "Mr. Mycroft"'s powers of deduction may be very much Mr. Holmes', but a lot of his dialog failed to ring entirely true to me, somehow. And, honestly, the killer bee plot is just kind of silly. But I almost didn't care about that, just because the misanthropic narrator entertained me so much. I'm not even entirely sure why. He's not a good person, but he amused me immensely. Maybe it's just that you don't see many protagonists in fiction whose main motivation is that they just want to not have to talk to people, and as an anti-social introvert myself, I can't help but relate.

Rating: I'm giving this one a 3.5/5. The ridiculousness of the plot and its failure to 100% work for me as a Holmes story make it hard to justify rating it higher, but I am still seriously tempted. ( )
  bragan | Feb 28, 2021 |
Sydney Silchester has a taste for honey and a taste for solitude. He’s able to avoid mixing with the nearby village and deal directly with a local beekeeping couple to keep himself in honey. But one day, the wife of the couple is dead—stung to death by her own bees—and the hives are ordered destroyed. Fortunately for Sydney, he discovers a new supplier, a recluse like himself who goes by “Mr. Mycroft”. Mr. Mycroft thinks the beekeeper’s death suspicious and ropes Sydney into a Watson-like role as he solves the case.

This is quite obviously a Sherlock Holmes continuation, and I thought it pretty good overall. It was quite scary, actually, imagining killer bees! I like bees, but wasps and hornets are jerks, and killer bees resemble the latter more than the former. There was no real mystery in terms of identifying a murder; it was more like a thriller as the reader wonders whether Mr. Mycroft and Sydney will be able to defeat the criminal. Mr. Mycroft proves as brilliant as you might expect from someone who is essentially Sherlock Holmes. Sydney is more like Stupid Watson than Book Watson; he’s a lot whinier and prissier than Watson with regard to Mr. Mycroft’s plans and traps. So while I enjoyed reading about the mystery, I wanted to slap the narrator.

I would not object to reading another if I happened to come across it, but I am not going to go out of my way looking for it. ( )
  rabbitprincess | Jan 30, 2020 |
Mr. Silchester really loves honey--but not the kind you can get at a market. Only honey straight from the beekeeper will do. And finding it is even enough to persuade Mr. Silchester to have contact with other human beings, something he rarely sees the need for, feeling himself to be perfectly self-sufficient. (Of course, he has a housekeeper who comes in and cooks for him!) He collects his jars of honey and combs from a strange couple, and at one point he hears the husband berating the wife. Soon afterwards, the wife is stung to death by bees! While sympathetic, Mr. Silchester's main concern is where to find more honey, since the deadly bees are to be destroyed and he thinks it unlikely the beekeeper will continue with new bees.

A somewhat farfetched occurrence puts the reclusive Mr. Silchester in touch with Mr. Mycroft, who also keeps bees, although on their first meeting he appears more interested in talking Mr. Silchester's ear off than concluding the sale of his honey. Mr. Mycroft believes that the wife being stung to death was no accident, but actually a clever "murder by bees" by her evil husband, who no doubt has new victims in his sights. And when it turns out the beekeeper is still keeping bees, Mr. Silchester begins to take Mr. Mycroft more seriously. Not seriously enough, however. He avoids fulfilling Mr. Mycroft's request to introduce him to the beekeeper. But then....

That's enough for plot. It proceeds from there, and it is a highly unusual piece of crime fiction with a possibly unique murder weapon--not to mention the "solution" to dealing with the criminal. And who is the mysterious Mr. Mycroft? For some unfathomable reason, Mysterious Press splashes "A Mycroft Holmes Mystery" across the cover. If they had bothered to read their own lengthy introduction and (less lengthy) afterword, they might not have. (Even with these additions, the ebook is still only 186 pages long.)

Regardless of the identify of Mr. Mycroft or the unusual murder method, the book suffers on several counts. The plot lacks complications or much suspense. Instead we are treated to Mr. Mycroft's endless, but only sometimes engrossing, speechifying, including side tracks and psychological analyses of the murderer. Just like the reader, Mr. Silchester's own attention wanders, only to be drawn back when Mr. Mycroft says something REALLY interesting. Mr. Silchester's role is also to ask those necessary questions (a la Dr. Watson) that allow Mycroft to explain his methods of detection, which often escaped notice, so that Silchester (and us readers) can appreciate their brilliance. Mycroft's methods are clever and definitely reminiscent of Sherlock Holmes, but even in a short book, they are not interesting enough to raise the narrative above that of the average mystery novel. Other Mr. Mycroft books follow--but I am not inclined to do so myself. ( )
  datrappert | Dec 8, 2017 |
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In a quiet village far from the noise of Victorian London, Sydney Silchester lives the life of a recluse led by two passions: privacy and honey. He gives up the former only when his stores of the latter run low. But when his honey supplier is found stung to death by her hive, the search for a new beekeeper takes Sydney to Mr. Mycroft, a brilliant man who has retired to Sussex to take up precisely this occupation, and who shares many traits with the great detective, Sherlock Holmes. Upon hearing of the tragic death of the village's other beekeeper, Mycroft, himself no stranger to crime-solving, immediately senses the bloody hand of murder. But what villain would have the mad intelligence to train an army of killer bees? With Sydney at his side, Mycroft embarks on a life-threatening search for the perpetrator of this most diabolical crime.Hailed by author, critic, and famed Sherlock Holmes scholar Christopher Morley as the only worthwhile continuation of the Holmes novels, A Taste for Honey is an engaging and terrifying mystery that proves enjoyable even to those with little to no knowledge of Doyle's characters.

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