Dear Mr. Holmes: Seven Holmes on the Range Mysteries by Steve Hockensmith

Dear Mr. Holmes: Seven Holmes on the Range Mysteries by Steve Hockensmith“I think we need to ask ourselves a very important question: What would Sherlock Holmes do in this situation?” – Gustav Amlingmeyer

Though now a full blown series of novels that recently saw its fifth entry, World’s Greatest Sleuth!, author Steve Hockensmith’s Holmes on the Range series got its start as short stories appearing in magazines such as Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine. Now for the first time all seven stories which have featured the Amlingmeyer brothers, cowboys turned detectives in late 1890’s America, are available in one collection: Dear Mr. Holmes: Seven Holmes on the Range Mysteries.

The opening story of the collection, Dear Mr. Holmes, introduces readers to brothers Otto “Big Red” and Gustav “Old Red” Amlingmeyer. While out on a cattle drive, Otto entertains his fellow cowboys in the evenings by telling stories or reading from magazines. The Amlingmeyers lives change forever the night Otto reads a story called “The Red-Headed League” to the group.

Gustav is immediately captivated by the story’s lead character, some English bloke named Sherlock Holmes, and becomes obsessed with the idea of “detectin’ and deducifyin'” (“Some folks get religion. Gustav got Sherlock Holmes.”). When two of their fellow cowboys are murdered one night Gustav gets to put the lessons he’s learned from Mr. Holmes to the test sooner than anticipated as the Amlingmeyers attempt to solve the killings. And with that, Gustav “Holmes of the Range” Amlingmeyer is born.

All the stories in the collection are told by Otto in the form of letters to editors of various magazines in which he, playing the Watson role, records and recounts the Amlingmeyers’ adventures in story form in hopes of selling them. Other stories in the collection include:

Gustav Amlingmeyer, Holmes of the Range puts a serious hitch in the giddyap of the brothers’ attempt at owning a cafe when an obnoxious customer is killed, apparently as a result of poison, while eating at their establishment. The brothers have to figure out who did it before they’re run out of town on a rail…or worse.

Wolves In Winter come in two varieties in this short, literal and figurative. When a snowstorm catches the Amlingmeyers just as night is falling and with no place to hole up in sight they think matters can’t get much worse. That is until a pack of hungry wolves descends upon them and their horses. When a cabin looms in the distance the brothers make a mad dash for safety and barely make it one step ahead of the wolves, only to find wolves of a two-legged variety already inside.

Dear Dr. Watson marks the brothers’ first official employment as detectives. Suffice it to say that between being laughed at by Pinkerton Detectives, attacked by a mad chihuahua, and discovering their new employer isn’t quite who they thought he was their first official job is something less than the career starter Gustav had hoped for.

The Water Indian finds the Amlingmeyers in Bear Lake Valley, Utah, and while the ancient Indian water spirit supposedly in the area killing the unwary may or may not be real, there’s no denying the town they happen upon has dwindled to a population of just one family. When they are invited to stay with the family, which includes two unmarried daughters close in age to the twenty-something brothers, it seems like an offer too good to be true. Why has this family stayed when all the others have left or disappeared? Gustav is determined to get to the bottom of things.

The Devil’s Acre finds Otto front and center having to play the Sherlock role usually filled by Gustav. Of course since it’s Gustav’s disappearance he is investigating the experience is a bit more stressful than he’d have preferred for his first case as lead deducifier. The Devil’s Acre also features a particularly wonderful example of Hockensmith’s sense of humor, in which the reader gets to have fun filling in the blanks where Otto has censored the profanity in his recounting of the tale. They start out relatively obvious and straightforward, but become increasingly hilarious and open to interpretation. In fact, I’d love to hear everyone’s best guess on the following:

“Alright, you stupid q___-b_______ z__________s,” I growled, coming to my feet. “You asked for it.” The hoodlums froze, looking confused. Apparently, they’d never been called q___-b_______ z__________s before.

Seriously, any guesses? Leave ’em in the comments below.

Greeting from Purgatory! puts Big Red and Old Red back on a train following their decidedly disastrous stint as detectives for the Southern Pacific railway in On the Wrong Track. Given Old Red’s notorious motion sickness, the brothers’ longstanding hatred of all railway companies, and recent less than stellar stint as employees for the same company whose train they find themselves forced to use are the Amlingmeyers headed for purgatory, or hell? One thing’s for sure, the armed bandits who attack the train aren’t going to help matters.

The first couple of stories in Dear Mr. Holmes: Seven Holmes on the Range Mysteries occur prior to the first Holmes on the Range novel, with the others taking place “between” the adventures that occur in subsequent novels. All of them, however, stand on their own and having read the novels is not required (though you really should). Chances are even if you’re a dedicated fan of the series you’ve never read all seven of these stories, and even if you have here’s your chance to have them all collected in one place. And if you’ve never read any of the Holmes on the Range books, this is the perfect opportunity to meet the Amlingmeyers and get your feet wet.

Dear Mr. Holmes: Seven Holmes on the Range Mysteries is available for $2.99 at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Smashwords.

PS – As always, be sure to read the copyright page. Yes, the copyright page. Hockensmith’s so funny he can make even the normally boring legal stuff entertaining.

Steve Hockensmith is the New York Times best-selling author of Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls. His first novel, Holmes on the Range, was a finalist for the Edgar, Shamus, Anthony and Dilys awards, and its heroes went on to star in four sequels (On the Wrong Track, The Black Dove, The Crack in the Lens and World’s Greatest Sleuth!). Before turning his hand to novels, he was a prolific writer of short fiction, as evidenced by the collection Naughty: Nine Tales of Christmas Crime. To learn more about Steve, visit his website.

15 Comments

  • Naomi Johnson

    April 26, 2011 - 8:41 PM

    Quaggy-butted zombies, for sure.

  • Clare2e

    April 26, 2011 - 8:18 PM

    I have to confess to loving quail-banging zealots, I mean biblically. Still, for variety, how about quahog-bellied zither-merchants?

    • Elizabeth A. White

      April 27, 2011 - 8:44 AM

      Ok, had to look up zither too, so you people are definitely getting creative. 😉

  • Steve

    April 26, 2011 - 5:16 PM

    Great guesses, everybody! I especially like “quiver-bellied zymurgists.” And now (thanks to Google) I know what a “zymurgist” is, so that’s a bonus.

    I’m afraid I can’t reveal the definitive, true-to-life cusses, though. You’ve got to remember: I don’t write these stories, Big Red Amlingmeyer does. He’s not online much — it’s hard to get a decent wireless signal in the 1890s — but hopefully he’ll pop up sooner or later to solve the mystery.

  • Justin Holley

    April 26, 2011 - 4:40 PM

    “You–you quill-bearing zebras!”

  • Chuck

    April 26, 2011 - 4:11 PM

    “You quim-butchering zombies!”

    “You quiver-bellied zymurgists!”

    “You quief-blistered zygotes!”

    — c.

    • Elizabeth A. White

      April 26, 2011 - 4:14 PM

      Ok, I actually had to look zymurgists up, so that was well played!

  • Elyse/Pop Culture Nerd

    April 26, 2011 - 3:54 PM

    How about “quail-banging zealots”?

  • Dan O'Shea

    April 26, 2011 - 3:39 PM

    quahog-buggering zoophiles?

  • Sabrina Ogden

    April 26, 2011 - 1:42 PM

    This sounds like fun. Have no idea what “q___-b_______ z__________s,” is but I do plan to find out by reading the book… Which, by the way, I’ve just purchased.

    Excellent review =)

    • Elizabeth A. White

      April 26, 2011 - 2:55 PM

      But you won’t find out, that’s the point. It looks exactly like that in the book, as do the other censored profanities, only giving you a starting letter to indicate what the word might be and leaving the reader to fill in as their filthy little mind sees fit. 😛