The Seven-Per-Cent Solution: Being a Reprint from the Reminiscences of John H. Watson, M.D. (1974) is a Sherlock Holmes pastiche by Nicholas Meyer. Published as a "lost manuscript" of the late Dr. John H. Watson, it recounts Holmes' recovery from cocaine addiction (with the help of Sigmund Freud) and his subsequent prevention of a European war through the unravelling of a sinister kidnapping plot. It was followed by two other Meyer pastiches, in chronological order, The Canary Trainer and The West End Horror.
Meyer's revisionist novel purports to replace two of the canonical Sir Arthur Conan Doyle short stories: "The Adventure of the Final Problem", in which Holmes apparently died at the hands of Prof. James Moriarty, and "The Adventure of the Empty House", wherein Holmes reappeared after a three-year absence and revealed that he had not been killed after all. This novel presents those tales as fabrications, published by Watson to deceive the public about the truth behind Holmes’ temporary disappearance.
According to Meyer's account, Holmes’ view of Moriarty as the "Napoleon of Crime" was nothing more than the fevered imagining of his cocaine-sodden mind; Moriarty was actually the childhood mathematics tutor of the two Holmes brothers (Sherlock and Mycroft). Furthermore, the teacher meets Watson, denies that he is a criminal and reluctantly threatens to sue Holmes for slander unless the accusations cease.
What finally does the job is a whiff of mystery: one of the doctor's patients is kidnapped and Holmes’ curiosity is sufficiently aroused. The case takes the three men on a breakneck train ride across Austria in pursuit of a foe who is about to launch a war involving all of Europe. (Holmes remarks during the denouement that they have succeeded only in postponing the war, not preventing it; presumably World War I was the delayed conflagration.)
One final hypnosis session reveals a key traumatic event in Holmes' childhood. His father murdered his mother and then committed suicide because she had a lover. Holmes learned of this from his tutor, Moriarty, who then became a dark and malignant figure in Holmes’ subconscious. (Watson notes that Moriarty must have played a greater role in the affair than Freud first deduced, since Mycroft Holmes had some sort of "hold" over him; Moriarty may have been the lover.) Freud and Watson conclude that Holmes, consciously unable to face the emotional ramifications of this event, has pushed them deep into his unconscious while finding outlets in fighting evil, pursuing justice, and many of his famous eccentricities, including his cocaine habit.
Watson returns to London, but Holmes decides to travel alone for a while, and the famed "Great Hiatus" is thus more or less preserved. It is during these travels that the events of Meyer's sequel The Canary Trainer occur.
Note: on the train to Vienna, Holmes and Watson briefly meet Rudolf Rassendyll (of The Prisoner of Zenda fame), returning from his adventures in Ruritania.
Meyer's adapted screenplay was nevertheless nominated for a 1977 Academy Award.
1974 novels | 1976 films | Mystery novels | Sherlock Holmes films | Sherlock Holmes pastiches
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It uses material from the
"The Seven-Per-Cent Solution".
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