A Soul of Steel (58 page)

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Authors: Carole Nelson Douglas

Tags: #Historical, #Mystery & Detective, #Traditional British, #Women Sleuths, #irene adler, #sherlock holmes, #Fiction

BOOK: A Soul of Steel
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A:
 I gave her one of Holmes’ bad habits. She smokes “little cigars.” Smoking was an act of rebellion for women then, and because Doyle shows her sometimes donning male dress to go unhampered into public places.  I also gave her “a wicked little revolver” to carry. When Doyle put her in male disguise at the end of his story, I doubt he was thinking of the modem psychosexual ramifications of cross-dressing.

Q:
 
Essentially, you have changed Irene Adler from an ornamental woman to a working woman.

A:
 My Irene is more a rival than a romantic interest for Holmes, yes. She is not a logical detective in the same mold as he, but is as gifted in her intuitive way. Nor is her opera singing a convenient profession for a beauty of the day, but a passionate vocation that was taken from her by the King of Bohemia’s autocratic attitude toward women, forcing her to occupy herself with detection. Although Doyle’s Irene is beautiful, well dressed, and clever, my Irene demands that she be taken seriously despite these feminine attributes.

I like to write “against” conventions that are no longer true, or were never true. This is the thread that runs through all my fiction: my dissatisfaction with the portrayal of women in literary and popular fiction then and even now. This begins with
Amberleigh
—my postfeminist mainstream version of the Gothic revival popular novels of the 1960s and 1970s—and continues with Irene Adler today. I’m interested in women as survivors. Men also interest me of necessity, men strong enough to escape cultural blinders to become equal partners to strong women.

Q:
 
How do you research these books?

A:
 From a lifetime of reading English literature and a theatrical background that educated me on the clothing, culture, customs, and speech of various historical periods. I was reading Oscar Wilde plays when I was eight years old. My mother’s book club meant that I cut my teeth on Eliot, Balzac, Kipling, Poe, poetry, Greek mythology, Hawthorne, the Brontës, Dumas, and Dickens. Then I went to school and libraries and met a thousand other authors.

In doing research, I have a fortunate facility of using every nugget I find, or of finding that every little fascinating nugget works itself into the story. Perhaps that’s because journalists must be ingenious in using every fact available to make a story as complete and accurate as possible under deadline conditions. Often the smallest mustard seed of research swells into an entire tree of plot. The corpse on the dining-room table of Bram Stoker, author of
Dracula,
was too macabre to resist and spurred the entire plot of the second Adler novel,
The Adventuress
(formerly
Good Morning, Irene).
Stoker rescued a drowning man from the Thames and carried him home for revival efforts, but it was too late.

Besides using my own extensive library on this period, I’ve borrowed from my local library all sorts of arcane books they don’t even know they have because no one ever checks them out. The Internet aids greatly with the specific fact. I’ve also visited London and Paris to research the books, a great hardship, but worth it. I also must visit Las Vegas periodically for my contemporary-set Midnight Louie mystery series. No sacrifice is too great.

Q:
 
You’ve written high and urban fantasy novels, why did you turn to mystery?
                                                                               

A.
 All novels are fantasy and all novels are mystery in the largest sense. Although mystery was often an element in my early novels, when I evolved the Irene Adler idea, I considered it simply a novel.
Good Night, Mr. Holmes
was almost on the shelves before I realized it would be “categorized” as a mystery. So Irene is utterly a product of my mind and times, not of the marketplace, though I always believed that the concept was timely and necessary.

 

SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY

 

Belford, Barbara.
Bram Stoker.
New York, NY: Alfred A. Knopf, 1996.

Bunson, Matthew E.
Encyclopedia Sherlockiana.
New York, NY; MacMillan, 1994.

Coleman, Elizabeth Ann.
The Opulent Era.
New York, NY: The Brooklyn Museum, 1989.

Crow, Duncan.
The Victorian Woman.
London UK: Cox &Wyman Ltd, 1971.

Doyle, Arthur Conan. The Complete Works of Sherlock Holmes. Various editions.

Gold, Arthur and Fizdale, Robert.
The Divine Sarah.
New York, NY: Knopf, 1991.

Hibbert, Christopher.
The Royal Victorians.
New York, NY: Lippincott, 1976.

Mackay, James.
Allan Pinkerton: The Eye Who Never Slept.
Edinburgh, Scotland: Mainstream Publishing Co., Ltd., 1996.

National Gallery of Australia.
Paris in the Late 19
th
Century.
Publications Department, National Gallery of Australia: Canberra, Australia, 1996.

Russell, John.
Paris.
New York, NY: Abradale Press/ Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 1983.

 

 

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR

www.carolenelsondouglas.com

 

Carole Nelson Douglas
is the award-winning author of 60 novels in the mystery/thriller, science fiction/fantasy and romance/women’s fiction genres. She currently writes the long-running Midnight Louie, feline PI, cozy-noir mystery series (
Catnap, Pussyfoot
,
Cat on a Blue Monday
etc.) and the Delilah Street, Paranormal Investigator, noir urban fantasy series (
Dancing with Werewolves
) set in imaginative variations of Las Vegas: contemporary and paranormally post-apocalyptic.

 

Carole was the first author to make a Sherlockian female character, Irene Adler, a series protagonist, with
the
New York Times
Notable Book,
Good Night, Mr.
Holmes.
She has won Lifetime Achievement Awards from
RT Book Reviews
for Mystery, Suspense and Versatility and was named a Pioneer of Publishing. She’s also won several Cat Writers’ Association first-place Muse Medallions. Carole has e-published (
www.wishlist.com
) shorter fiction.

 

A daily newspaper reporter, feature writer and editor in St. Paul, she moved to Fort Worth to write fiction fulltime and was recently inducted into the Texas Literary Hall of Fame.

 

ALSO BY CAROLE NELSON DOUGLAS

 

“Her fine Sherlockian novels and her Midnight Louie books have turned her into a genuine mystery star. Pick one up and you'll see why.”—Ed Gorman, founder of
Mystery Scene
magazine

 

The
New York Times
Notable IRENE ADLER Series

Good Night, Mr. Holmes... The Adventuress... A Soul of Steel... Another Scandal in Bohemia... Chapel Noir and Castle Rouge (Jack the Ripper duology)... Femme Fatale...Spider Dance

 

The MIDNIGHT LOUIE Feline PI series

Ca
tnap... Pussyfoot... Cat on a Blue Monday... Cat in a Crimson Haze... Cat in a Diamond Dazzle... Cat with an Emerald Eye... Cat in a Flamingo Fedora... Cat in a Golden Garland... Cat on a Hyacinth Hunt... Cat in an Indigo Mood... Cat in a Jeweled Jumpsuit... Cat in a Kiwi Con... Cat in a Leopard Spot... Cat in a Midnight Choir... Cat in a Neon Nightmare... Cat in an Orange Twist... Cat in a Hot Pink Pursuit... Cat in a Quicksilver Caper... Cat in a Red Hot Rage... Cat in a Topaz Tango... Cat in a Sapphire Slipper... Cat in an Ultramarine Scheme... Cat in a Vegas Gold Vendetta... Cat in a White Tie and Tails... Cat in an Alien X-Ray

 

Th
e DELILAH STREET, Paranormal Investigator series

Dancing with Werewolves... Brimstone Kiss... Vampire Sunrise... Silver Zombie... Virtual Virgin

 

Table of Contents

AUTHOR’S NOTE

CAST OF CONTINUING CHARACTERS

FOREWORD

THE NAVAL TREATY

READERS GUIDE

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

ALSO BY THIS AUTHOR

Table of Contents

AUTHOR’S NOTE

CAST OF CONTINUING CHARACTERS

FOREWORD

THE NAVAL TREATY

READERS GUIDE

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

ALSO BY THIS AUTHOR

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