Books and Bipeds: The 2015 BSI Dinner weekend
Little things—pamphlets, and lapel pins—can sometimes offer great pleasure.
Read MoreLittle things—pamphlets, and lapel pins—can sometimes offer great pleasure.
Read MoreVincent Starrett, Alexander Woollcott, William Gillette and the 1934 Baker Street Irregulars Dinner
Read MoreAs the year winds down, we end 2014 with a sentimental tale designed by Starrett for the holiday season.
Read MoreThings I learned after the articles were posted.
Read MoreIt is unlike anything else Vincent Starrett ever wrote, and you don't have to look hard to find a Sherlock Holmes connection.
Read MoreVincent Starrett's mysteries had a surprising life in France.
Read MoreWho was the responsible for four Sherlockians being represented in one issue of a Reader's Digest-style magazine in 1945?
Read MoreMagazines have changed a lot over the decades, but there's one sales gimmick that has remained: Putting something on the cover that will make you pick up that issue. Vincent Starrett was a writer whose name sold magazines. Here are a few examples.
Read MoreAs the wave of experimental little literary magazines was coming to an end, Vincent Starrett entered with his own contribution.
Read MoreHow an inscribed volume of Starrett's poems brings both elation and sadness.
Read MoreTracing the history of an iconic Sherlock Holmes image.
Read MoreHow a bookplate created in 1931 became an iconic image of Sherlock Holmes.
Read MoreThe Private Life of Sherlock Holmes is a classic. Did contemporary reviewers know this? Here's what three had to say.
Read MoreWanted: Information on the hand-corrected chapters of The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes.
Read MoreThere once was a poet from Chicago . . . .
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