Thursday, March 13, 2008

The Adventure of The Bruce Partington Plans



The Adventure of The Bruce-Partington Plans – Sir Arthur Conan Doyle


* This book is available at LoDingo.com *




The monotony of pea-soup-fog-shrouded London is broken by a sudden visit from Holmes’s brother Mycroft. He has come about some missing, secret submarine plans. Seven of the ten pages — three are still missing — were found with Arthur Cadogan West’s body. He was a young clerk in a government office at Woolwich Arsenal whose body was found next to the Underground tracks near Aldgate, his head crushed. He had little money with him (although there appears to have been no robbery), theatre tickets, and curiously, no Underground ticket. The three missing pages by themselves could enable one of Britain’s enemies to build a Bruce-Partington submarine.


It seems clear that Cadogan West fell from a train and that he stole the plans meaning to sell them, but the mystery is truly complex:



  • How did Cadogan West meet his end?

  • If he was thrown off a train, what was he doing at Aldgate, well past the stop where he presumably would have gone?

  • If he had made an appointment with a foreign agent to sell the plans, would he not have kept his evening free instead of buying theatre tickets for himself and his fiancĂ©e?

  • How did he get into the Underground without a ticket, or did someone take it?

  • Why can no evidence of violence be found in any Underground coach?

  • How is it that Cadogan’s head was crushed and yet there was very little bleeding by the track where he was found?


Inspector Lestrade tells Holmes that a passenger has seen fit to report hearing a thud at about the location in question, as though a body had fallen on the track. He could not see anything, however, owing to the thick fog.




About the Narrator

David Ian Davies is a talented actor and acclaimed dramatic reader that has given voice to the popular Star Wars video games and many classic stories, including works penned by Shakespeare, HG Wells and Oscar Wilde. His Sherlockian audio performances are arguably his best to date, with reviewers raving about his truly amazing skill in bringing the stories to life.



“…to refer to David's Sherlock Holmes productions as simply dramatic readings is a major understatement, as he brings a wonderful range of distinctly unique voices into play as he essays each of the characters, creating a marvelously layered and rich listening experience that showcases Arthur Conan Doyle's masterful use of language.”

Charles Prepolec

bakerstreetdozen.com



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To buy The Adventure of The Bruce-Partington Plans by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Click HERE