The West End Horror

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The West End Horror
First edition cover
First edition cover
Author Nicholas Meyer
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Mystery novels
Publisher E P Dutton
Released May 1976
Media Type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
ISBN ISBN 0-525-23102-1 (first edition, hardback)
Preceded by The Canary Trainer

The West End Horror: A Posthumous Memoir of John H. Watson, M.D. is a Sherlock Holmes pastiche novel by Nicholas Meyer, published in 1976. It takes place after Meyer's other two Holmes pastiches, The Seven-Per-Cent Solution and The Canary Trainer, though it was published in between the two. The plot concerns a series of strange murders in London's Theater District at the end of the 19th Century. Contrary to what the press has sometimes asserted, The West End Horror has nothing to do with (though it arguably bears subtle references to) Jack the Ripper or his crimes. Although this novel does not feature a dramatic action climax (unlike Meyer's other two pastiches), the mystery's denouement may well affect many more people than those of Meyer's other adventures.

[edit] Plot summary

The book is written in the form of a false document. It opens with a foreword by Meyer, who states that the manuscript was brought to his attention by a woman with some familial connection to Horace Vernet, also an ancestor of Holmes. The woman had read The Seven-Per-Cent Solution and thought Meyer might be interested. Although damaged by water, the manuscript proved authentic.

Dr Watson explains in his own preface that he did not publish the story because of the number of well-known persons who would be affected - persons whose identity would be impossible to disguise. Holmes had for a long time refused Watson permission to write the story on these very grounds, but Watson eventually persuaded him by promising to place the manuscript in Holmes' hands, the only condition being that he not destroy it.

The story does, indeed, involve many well-known people, including George Bernard Shaw who hires Holmes to look into the death of an unpleasant theatre critic; Sir Arthur Sullivan, one of whose singers at the D'Oyly Carte company was another victim of the murderer; also W. S. Gilbert, Oscar Wilde, Bram Stoker, Henry Irving, Ellen Terry, Frank Harris and Dr Moore Agar, whose dramatic introduction to Holmes Watson has elsewhere (in one of the stories published under his pseudonym, "Arthur Conan Doyle") said he might some day recount.