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Historical Figures - Fiction, Other Mystery Categories, Historical Fiction
Night Watch by Stephen Kendrick β€” book cover

Night Watch

by Stephen Kendrick
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Overview

It's Christmas Day, 1902. A priest has been murdered in a London church during a secret meeting-to discuss the possibility of a Parliament of World Religions. Now Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson-with some assistance from Father Brown-must discern if the killer is indeed one of the leaders of the world's greatest faiths...

About the Author, Stephen Kendrick

Stephen Kendrick is the minister of First and Second Church, Boston, and has previously served churches in Connecticut, Maryland, and Pennsylvania, as well as Unitarian chapels in the West Midlands of England. He has written for The Christian Century, The Hartford Courant, and the New York Times. He is the author of Holy Clues: The Gospel According to Sherlock Holmes.

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Editorials

Forrest Church

Religion and mystery are perfect partners to begin with, but Stephen Kendrick weds them brilliantly in Night Watch, as true to the spirit of Sherlock Holmes and Father Brown as it is original and beguiling.

Frederick Buechner

A marvelous evocation of Edwardian London. A cast of characters that includes not onlySherlock Holmes but also Chesterton's Father Brown. An ingenious plot involving representatives of the six great world religions. Maybe most of all Night Watch provides fascinating new insights into the innermost nature of the immortal detective himself.

George Garrett

What Stephen Kendrick has done here, and done wonderfully well, is to come upon a fresh, original, capital story, then bring that to life and full bloom with art and efficiency. Night Watch is a pure delight, bound to please (and to surprise) the Holmes fans and the Brown fans and everybody else who loves a good tale well-told.

Publishers Weekly

With an ingenuous dismissal of other Sherlock Holmes pastiches as, well, mere pastiches, Kendrick sets about a taut reworking of the venerable "locked room" mystery. His tale of murder in the cathedral, he insists, is genuine: a lost account from the one true chronicler, Dr. Watson. Kendrick also dusts off another of sleuthdom's icons, Father Brown. The mix works. Though the narrative voice little evokes that of the Good Doctor, Kendrick knows and respects his source materials. A cleric himself, he also knows church history. Not only does he use little remembered figures (such as the heretic Pelagius) and events (such as the World's Parliament of Religions in 1893), but he integrates them so well with the mystery that the reader pores over the historical minutiae for possible clues. Representatives from each of the world's major religions gather secretly in a London church to plan for an important ecumenical conference; then one of them murders his Anglican host in most unholy fashion. Holmes and Father Brown have but one night to solve the grizzly murder, aided by such stalwarts as Inspector Lestrade and Mycroft Holmes. In the light of the past century's history and, particularly, recent events, there is a profoundly tragic aspect to Kendrick's plotting and his roster of suspects Roman Catholic, Anglican, Eastern Orthodox, Buddhist, Jewish, Hindu and Islamic who join together in the hope of establishing common ground. A century later, such vision seems all but trampled under. (Nov. 13) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

The influence of the Sherlock Holmes stories is so pervasive that each year sees more critical essays, parodies, pastiches, or other ways of continuing the Holmes canon. Two novels are the latest to surface, each with its own gimmick. In Night Watch, the great Holmes meets G.K. Chesterton's Father Brown. Kendrick (Holy Clues) stays safely on Holmes's home turf of London, and the tone of the book is closer to the original, with an appropriately sinister atmosphere. Holmes (and his brother Mycroft) and Watson are called to a convention of clerics of the world's major religions, where someone has murdered the host. Throughout the night, more deaths are discovered, but in the space of 24 hours, Holmes apparently solves the case. But then, two weeks later, Father Brown, in his quiet, self-effacing way, provides the real solution. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Given the resourcefulness of Sherlock Holmes pastiches, it was only a matter of time before Holmes, whose posthumous career has paired him with figures from Sigmund Freud to Jack the Ripper, met Father Brown. After an entertaining but detachable prologue in which Holmes neatly solves the disappearance of a storied ruby from his old Oxford college, he returns to Baker Street on Christmas 1902 to an urgent summons from Inspector Lestrade. Inspired by the example of the 1893 Chicago Exposition, the Archbishop of Canterbury has arranged a secret meeting of some of the world's leading clergymen-Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, Jewish, Hindu, Muslim, Buddhist-in St. Thomas's Church, Kensington, in preparation for a possible World's Parliament of Religions. Now that the mutilated body of St. Thomas rector Rev. Paul Appel, has been found in the church, all the illustrious guests have become suspects in his murder. Suavely overriding the visitors' protestations that they never could have had anything to do with such an outrage, Holmes-with strategic assistance from Father Brown, on hand as a translator for the Vatican representative-methodically unveils their deceptions in the course of a wild Christmas night as he wades through a further series of murderous assaults to unmask a clever, sacrilegious plot. Universalist minister Kendrick (Holy Clues: The Gospel According to Sherlock Holmes, not reviewed) has scant opportunity to bring his eminent suspects to life, but he shows an intriguingly complex Holmes, rough edges softened by a healthy respect for religion, but still active enough for the requisite heroics.

Book Details

Published
September 1, 2003
Publisher
New York : Berkley Prime Crime, 2003.
Pages
272
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780425191675

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