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Arthur Conan Doyle: Difference between revisions

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{{wikipediainfo}}The [[Prime Universe]]'s [[Sherlock Holmes#In the Prime Universe|Sherlock Holmes]] once complained that '''Mr Doyle''' kept writing to [[221B Baker Street]] trying to convince Holmes, [[Doctor Watson|Watson]] and [[Mrs Hudson]] to believe in “irrational third-eye poppycock”. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Time of the Toymaker (novel)|The Time of the Toymaker]]'')
{{wikipediainfo}}In some universes, such as [[Universe (You've Been To Eden, I Perceive)|the one]] where [[Aziraphale#The hot-cocoa individent|Aziraphale]] resided, '''Arthur Conan Doyle''' was the writer who invented [[Sherlock Holmes]]. Among his works featuring the character was ''[[A Study in Scarlet]]''. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[You've Been To Eden, I Perceive (short story)|You've Been To Eden, I Perceive]]'')
 
In the [[Prime Universe]], where [[Sherlock Holmes#In the Prime Universe|Sherlock Holmes]] was a real being, Holmes once complained that “Mr Doyle” kept writing to [[221B Baker Street]] trying to convince Holmes, [[Doctor Watson|Watson]] and [[Mrs Hudson]] to believe in “irrational third-eye poppycock”. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Time of the Toymaker (novel)|The Time of the Toymaker]]'')
== Behind the scenes ==
== Behind the scenes ==
Arthur Conan Doyle was, in the real world, the creator of Sherlock Holmes. Infamously, Doyle was also an ardent believer in Spiritualism and other occult phenomena, up to and including fairies. It is not unusual for later fiction involving Sherlock Holmes to posit that Doyle served as a “literary agent” of some kind for Watson's accounts of his adventures with Holmes.
Arthur Conan Doyle was, in the real world, the creator of Sherlock Holmes. Infamously, Doyle was also an ardent believer in Spiritualism and other occult phenomena, up to and including fairies. It is not unusual for later fiction involving Sherlock Holmes to posit that Doyle served as a “literary agent” of some kind for Watson's accounts of his adventures with Holmes.
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