PRAISE for Doyle's World--Lost &Found
"Everything you ever wanted to know about the dynamic duo"
"For fans of Sherlock Holmes and his creator, you can't dobetter than plunge into Doyle'sWorld--Lost & Found: The Unknown Histories of Sherlock Holmes and Sir ArthurConan Doyle. There you will find everything you ever wanted to knowabout the dynamic duo, including much it never would have occurred to you toask."
--NicholasMeyer, Oscar-nominated screenwriter/director and bestsellingauthor ofThe Seven-Per-Cent Solution and The Return ofthe Pharaoh
"Your passport to a thrilling world"
"Detect clues to long-debated Doylean literary mysteries"
"Whether you call yourself a 'Holmesian, ' a 'Watsonite'--or, God forbid, a'Lestradian'--you will be thrilled to detect clues to long-debated Doyleanliterary mysteries revealed by Drs. Friedman and Friedman without leavingthe comfort of your own tatty, Le Corbusier armchair. Had anothercrazy day? Then relax with an old Hungarian Tokay, indulge in somecommon black shag in a briarwood pipe, and savor Doyle's World--Lost & Found: TheUnknown Histories of Sherlock Holmes and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Thegame is afoot "
--IanPunnett, MDiv, PhD, Coast to Coast AM / iHeartRadio
Doyle'sWorld is no ordinary biography about one of the world'smost influential writers. It is instead a work that deciphers in particular thecryptic origins and actual scientific methods used by fiction's most famousconsulting detective Sherlock Holmes--and a work that provides a detailed lookinto the psyche and working life of Holmes' creator, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.The book follows Doyle's entire illustrious literary career, with emphasis on theSherlock Holmes mysteries as they evolved from the late 1880s to the early1900s. Revealed here for the first time--by son-father writing team DanielFriedman, MD, and Eugene Friedman, MD--are the many inspirations behindthe physical, emotional, and intellectual characteristics that Doyle wovetogether so deftly to bring his legendary sleuth to life. Readers are in formany surprises as the Friedmans bring forth tantalizing parallels between theliterary realm of both Sherlock Holmes--along with his various other fiction andnonfiction works--and the actual events from Doyle's childhood and earlyadulthood that served as frequent inspiration.