Rate this book

The Adventure Of The Peerless Peer (1976)

by Philip José Farmer(Favorite Author)
3.5 of 5 Votes: 3
ISBN
0440000424 (ISBN13: 9780440000426)
languge
English
genre
publisher
Dell
series
Wold Newton
review 1: This is part of the Word Newton series, a sort of mash-up cum homage in which Farmer posits a connection between literery figures as diverse as Mr Darcy and Batman. In this novelette, set during the First World War, an elderly Holmes and Watson set off for Africa in pursuit of the German spy, Von Bork who carries the secret of a particularly nasty, though ridiculously unbelievable, biological weapon. On arrival they encounter the semi- savage Lord Greystoke who is pursuing any Germans he can find in revenge for the murder of his wife. Mildly entertaining if you are familiar with at least some of the original literature, however I suspect that Foarmer had more fun writing this than I had reading it.
review 2: From the beginning of Titan Books' series of reissues
... more of classic Holmes pastiches and crossovers, I'd been wondering if they would manage to secure the rights to finally reprint Farmer's 1974 classic teaming Holmes and Tarzan. Granted, the original story penned by Farmer is relatively slim at 128 pages. As compared to most of Titans' reissues it's more novella than novel. Still, it's good to see the story back in print in a widely-available format that doesn't require fans to scour used bookstores or pick up pricier limited edition anthologies from specialty presses.For fans of Farmer and his "Wold Newton" concept, this book is pure gold. Any Wold-Newton-connected story, whether by Farmer or Win Eckert or anyone else, is a treasure-hunt: how many casual references to other fictional characters can you find? As expected from the man who built the original Wold-Newton Family Tree, Farmer drops plenty of names in these pages. He also carefully closes the connection between Holmes and Greystoke that he first outlined in his Tarzan Alive: that Holmes' "Adventure of the Priory School" involves the Greystokes, with Watson changing the family's name to Holdernesse in the published version to protect the family name and prevent public scandal.For fans of fast-moving pulp fiction, the book is pure gold as well. Even when the main characters are completely at rest (for instance, during long hours of air travel), the book still zips along. There are no long drawn-out descriptive passages (except, curiously, when Watson is describing the aircraft they are riding in). Holmes' mission is to stop Von Bork; the encounter with Tarzan only helps move that mission along. There aren't any secondary stories or side-trips; the longest lull in the action is the short breather towards the end where the Holmes-Tarzan connection is spelled out by the Great Detective.As far as the "extras" in this edition go: Win Scott Eckert is perhaps THE torch-bearer for the Wold-Newton concept now that Farmer has passed away; along with folks like Christopher Paul Carey, Eckert has been completing unfinished Farmer novels and writing stories that fill in "missing pieces" of the Wold-Newton family tree. Eckert's essay "puts the pieces together" for those who are not as well-versed in the published careers of Tarzan and Holmes, explaining most of Farmer's off-hand references to other characters and clarifying things like "the succession of ducal titles" that is so important to the Greystoke/"Holdernesse" line of succession. Eckert also explains the connection between PEER and "The Adventure of the Three Madmen," and nods to Dennis E. Powers' great essay reconciling the two stories. For anyone interested in knowing more about Wold-Newton scholarship, Eckert's Afterword to PEER is a great place to start.My only regret is that Titan didn't include "Three Madmen" in this volume. Rounding out the book with Farmer's alternate take on the story, and Powers' essay, would really have made it a complete package.So there you have it: a rollickin' good adventure that doesn't take very long to read, and a great essay to follow it up? What's not to love? less
Reviews (see all)
wow
This book was either humor over my head, satire beyond my ken, or a failure at both.
Perkji
If it weren't for the parodic elements, this would have scored much, much higher.
thehungergamesaddict
Sherlock Holmes meets Tarzan. What's not to like?
Manas
This was a very disappointing read...
nick
Do not like the author!
Write review
Review will shown on site after approval.
(Review will shown on site after approval)