Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Arsène Lupin vs. Herlock Sholmes

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Country
  
France

Publication date
  
1908

Media type
  
Print

Number of books
  
2

Language
  
French

Published in English
  
1910

Author
  
Maurice Leblanc

Genre
  
Crime Fiction

Arsène Lupin vs. Herlock Sholmes wwwbabeliocomcouvbm12293681851jpg

Books
  
The Blonde Lady, The Jewish Lamp

Arsène Lupin vs. Herlock Sholmes is a collection of two adventures of Arsène Lupin, written by Maurice Leblanc. These adventures feature a match of wits between Lupin and Herlock Sholmes, a transparent reference to Sherlock Holmes, the hero of Conan Doyle's detective stories. It follows the appearance of Arsène Lupin, Gentleman Burglar, in which Sherlock Holmes also makes an appearance in "Sherlock Holmes Arrives Too Late". The collection was translated twice into English, as Arsène Lupin versus Herlock Sholmes in the U.S. (1910, by George Morehead), and as Arsène Lupin versus Holmlock Shears in the UK (1910, by Alexander Teixeira de Mattos, printed as The Blonde Lady in the U.S.).

Contents

Publication history

The two stories were initially published in the magazine Je sais tout from November 1906. The first story, The Blonde Lady, was published from November 1906 to April 1907, while the second, The Jewish Lamp, appeared in September and October 1907. The collection of these two stories was published with modifications in February 1908, and in 1914, another edition appeared with further modifications. The English translations appeared in 1910.

Contents

The two English collections contain the following chapters or stories:

Arsène Lupin versus Herlock Sholmes (2 stories)

1) "The Blond Lady" (novel)

  • Lottery Ticket No. 514
  • The Blue Diamond
  • Herlock Sholmes Opens Hostilities
  • Light in the Darkness
  • An Abduction
  • Second Arrest of Arsène Lupin
  • 2) "The Jewish Lamp" (tale)

  • The Shipwreck
  • Arsène Lupin versus Holmlock Shears, aka The Blonde Lady (2 stories)
  • "The Blonde Lady", comprising six chapters
  • Number 514, Series 23
  • The Blue Diamond
  • Holmlock Shears Opens Hostilities
  • A Glimmer in the Darkness
  • Kidnapped
  • The Second Arrest of Arsène Lupin
  • "The Jewish Lamp", comprising two chapters
  • Chapter I
  • Chapter II
  • Summary

    The first story, "The Blonde Lady", opens with the purchase of an antique desk by a mathematics professor. The desk is subsequently stolen, as it turns out, by Arsène Lupin. Later, both Lupin and the professor realize that a lottery ticket, left inadvertently in the desk, is the winning ticket, and Lupin proceeds to ensure he obtains half of the winnings while executing a near-impossible escape with a blonde lady. After the theft of the Blue Diamond, again by a blonde lady, Ganimard made the connection to Lupin and an appeal was made to Herlock Sholmes to match wits with Lupin. Inadvertently, Lupin and his biographer met with the newly arrived Sholmes and his assistant, Wilson, in a Parisian restaurant, and they shared a cautious détente before Lupin sets off to lay his traps. Despite Lupin's efforts, Sholmes is able to unveil the identity of the blonde lady and Lupin's involvement in the crimes linked to her. Lupin succeeded in trapping Sholmes, however, and sends him off to Southampton in a boat, but Sholmes manages to escape back to Paris and engineer the arrest of Lupin. After Sholmes leaves, however, Lupin outfoxes his French captors and manages to bid farewell to Sholmes and Wilson at the Gare du Nord.

    "The Jewish Lamp" opens with another appeal to Herlock Sholmes for help in recovering a Jewish lamp. After reading the appeal, Sholmes is shocked to read a second letter, this time by Lupin and arriving on the same day's post, which warns him not to intervene. Sholmes is outraged by Lupin's audacity and resolves to go to Paris. At the Gare du Nord, Sholmes is accosted by a young lady, who again warns him not to intervene, and finds that the Echo de France, Lupin's mouthpiece newspaper, is proclaiming his arrival. Sholmes proceeds to investigate the crime and finds out the true reason for Lupin's appeal not to intervene.

    References

    Arsène Lupin vs. Herlock Sholmes Wikipedia