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  1. Diese Sherlock-Holmes-Storys wurden nicht von Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, sondern von Sohn Adrian Conan Doyle und John Dickson Carr (allzu) traditionell verfasst: Im viktorianischen England der 1890er Jahre werden allerlei vertrackte kriminalistische Rätsel von Holmes gewohnt souverän gelöst. Adrian Conan Doyle, John Dickson Carr, C. Bertelsmann.

  2. Adrian Conan Doyle has been depicted as a race-car driver, big-game hunter, explorer, and writer. Biographer Andrew Lycett calls him a "spendthrift playboy" who (with his brother Denis) "used the Conan Doyle estate as a milch-cow". He married Danish-born Anna Andersen, and was his father's literary executor after his mother died in 1940.

  3. The Times (4 june 1970, p. 12) Mr. Adrian Conan Doyle died suddenly in Geneva on Wednesday at the age of 59. He was the second son of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, creator of Sherlock Holmes, and had himself written stories in the famous idiom. He was trustee of the Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Estates and chairman of the Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Foundation.

  4. 11 de mai. de 1999 · Adrian Conan Doyle, figlio del grande Arthur, scrisse questi racconti con l'intenzione di ricreare l'atmosfera dei celebri racconti di Sherlock Holmes scritti dal padre. La raccolta comprende dodici racconti, di cui i primi sei sono scritti in collaborazione con John Dickson Carr.

    • Adrian Conan Doyle, John Dickson Carr
    • Adrian Conan Doyle, John Dickson Carr
  5. Interview of the late Adrian Conan Doyle, son of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. He discusses the Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Foundation in Switzerland (where the interv...

    • 7 min
    • 7,2K
    • Lauren Welch
  6. If you're going to read Sherlock Holmes pastiches, you eventually should read The Exploits of Sherlock Holmes, published in 1954 and written by Adrian Conan Doyle, the son of Arthur Conan Doyle, and and John Dickson Carr, Arthur Conan Doyle's biographer. It is an early collection of pastiches and by people so intimately connected with the ...

  7. The bored gentlemen were interesting in part because of their willingness to cavort in front of the camera in full armor, but also because one of the jousters had a famous name: He was Adrian Conan Doyle, the son of Arthur Conan Doyle, the creator of Sherlock Holmes. Adrian Conan Doyle, when not tending to his father’s literary estate, made ...