Sherlock Holmes and the Remaining Improbable |Spotlight - $50 Giveaway

Sherlock Holmes and the Remaining Improbable by Susanne M. Dutton | Book Spotlight | $50 Gift Card Giveaway

A book blog tour from Goddess Fish Promotions.

Thank you to the author, publisher, and Marianne & Judy at Goddess Fish for providing me the information for this tour.

Goddess Fish Full Logo

Book Details

Sherlock Holmes and the Remaining Improbable |Spotlight – $50 GiveawaySherlock Holmes and the Remaining Improbable by Susanne M. Dutton
Published by LuLu.com on May 8, 2021
Genres: Fiction, Adventure, Crime, Detective/Sleuth, Historical Fiction, Mystery, Psychological Thriller
Format: Paperback
Pages: 148

The Game is not afoot and the Better-Ever-Day World of 1895 is gone, even hard to recall as WWI ends.

From his rural cottage, Holmes no longer provokes Scotland Yard’s envy or his landlady’s impatience, but neither is he content with the study of bees. August 1920 finds him filling our entry papers at a nearly defunct psychiatric clinic on the Normandy coast.

England’s new Dangerous Drugs Act declares his cocaine use illegal and he aims to quit entirely. Confronted by a question as to his treatment goals, Holmes hesitates, aware that his real goal far exceeds the capacity of any clinic. His scribbled response, “no more solutions, but one true resolution,” seems more a vow than a goal to his psychiatrist, Pierre Joubert. The doctor is right.

Like a tiny explosion unaccountably shifting a far-reaching landscape, the simple words churn desperate action and interlocking mystery into the lives of Holmes’ friends and enemies both.

 

image button for Goodreads linking to Sherlock Holmes and the Remaining Improbable

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Purchase Links for Sherlock Holmes and the Remaining Improbable

Amazon     Amazon UK     Bookshop/IndieBound

Barnes & Noble     Kobo    iTunes     The Book Depository

Chapters/Indigo     Publisher

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Excerpt from Sherlock Holmes and the Remaining Improbable

Watson writes: 

Not for the first time, I felt a surge of gratitude for Holmes’ unspoken understanding that his digs at Bolt Cottage couldn’t suit me. No doubt his cottage fit his needs precisely, but it was no place for a visitor, perhaps purposely so.

Some might say it was no place for any inhabitant at all, full as it was with apparatus meant for Holmes’ scientific inquiries, not to mention the maps and almanacs, the world’s newspapers, and of course, his library. Books lined shelves and the stairway to the sleeping loft. Books invaded the corner of the ground floor room usually devoted to meal preparation, too. They filled the unused icebox, the pots that never knew soup, and lined most of the cupboards.

Books climbed the walls, stacked and somehow tracked in their positions with ribbons that hung from the center pages in a festive display—red, black, gold, green, purple, blue, white. Holmes claimed his color-coded system was modern and flawless. I never grasped it.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

About Susanne M. Dutton

Susanne M. Dutton Author Provided Image

Susanne M. Dutton is the one who hid during high school gym, produced an alternative newspaper, and exchanged notes in Tolkien’s Elfish language with her few friends.

While earning her B.A. in English, she drove a shabby Ford Falcon with a changing array of homemade bumper strips: Art for Art’s Sake, Forgive Us Our Trespasses, Free Bosie from the Scorn of History. Later, her interests in myth and depth psychology led to graduate and postgraduate degrees in counseling.

Nowadays, having outlived her mortgage and her professional counseling life, she aims herself at her desk most days; where she tangles with whatever story she can’t get out of her head. Those stories tend to seat readers within pinching distance of her characters, who, like most of us, slide at times from real life to fantasy and back. A man with Alzheimer’s sets out alone for his childhood home. A girl realizes she’s happier throwing away her meals than eating them. A woman burgles her neighbors in order to stay in the neighborhood.

Born in Des Moines, Iowa, Susanne grew up in the SF Bay Area, has two grown children, and lives with her husband in an old Philadelphia house, built of the stones dug from the ground where it sits.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Giveaway!

One randomly chosen winner via rafflecopter will win a $50 Amazon/BN.com gift card.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Visit more stops on the tour for extra chances to win!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Purchase Sherlock Holmes and the Remaining Improbable online from a local book store.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Amazon Easy Purchase Links

41NEBn7EtdS. AC AC SR98,95Sherlock Holmes and the Rem...Shop on Amazon    41NEBn7EtdS. AC AC SR98,95Sherlock Holmes and the Rem...Shop on Amazon

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Full Tour Schedule

May 25: Literary Gold
May 27: Candrel’s Crafts, Cooks, and Characters
June 1: FUONLYKNEW
June 3: Lisa Haselton’s Reviews and Interviews
June 8: Our Town Book Reviews
June 10: Viviana MacKade
June 15: The Avid Reader
June 17: All the Ups and Downs
June 22: Travel the Ages
June 24: Hope. Dreams. Life… Love
June 29: Becoming Extraordinary
July 1: The Key Of Love
July 13: Fabulous and Brunette
July 15: Cover To Cover Cafe
July 20: Lisa’s Reading
July 22: Novels Alive
July 27: Aubrey Wynne: Timeless Love
July 29: Jazzy Book Reviews
August 3: Archaeolibrarian – I Dig Good Books!
August 5: Deborah-Zenha Adams
August 10: Gina Rae Mitchell
August 12: Iron Canuck Reviews & More
August 17: Westveil Publishing
August 19: Inside the Insanity
August 24: The Faerie Review
August 26: Stormy Nights Reviewing & Bloggin’
August 31: BooksChatter
September 2: Straight From the Library
September 7: Author C.A.Milson
September 9: Long and Short Reviews

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

More reviews

Tools of a Thief by D. Hale Rambo 

 

Blog graphic - Goddess Fish Tour Host - War of the Squirrels by Kirsten Weiss

Divider

 


Discover more from Gina Rae Mitchell

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Divider

Posted 08/09/2021 by Gina in Blog Tour, Book Promotions, Book Reviews, Books, Fiction / 17 Comments

Tags: , , , ,

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

17 responses to “Sherlock Holmes and the Remaining Improbable |Spotlight – $50 Giveaway

    • Yes. It’s now legal–and of course the market is saturated and it’s not easy to find a publisher. My own publisher actually wrote to me that they chose “Sherlock Holmes and the Remaining Improbable,” because though it’s absolutely the classic Holmes, it’s also absolutely unique. Your husband would know that Watson says the Holmes is “the best and wisest man” he’s ever met. I tried to give readers an example of what a “best and wisest” person might decide to do in his later years. Thank you for your comment. Susanne Dutton, author

    • Yes. It’s now legal–and of course the market is saturated and it’s not easy to find a publisher. My own publisher wrote to me that they chose “Sherlock Holmes and the Remaining Improbable,” because though it’s absolutely the classic Holmes, it’s also absolutely unique. Your husband would know that Watson says the Holmes is “the best and wisest man” he’s ever met. I tried to give readers an example of what a “best and wisest” person might decide to do in his later years. Thank you for your comment. Susanne Dutton, author

    • Hi Sherry. What about the post grabbed you the most? I want to learn how to do a better job by giving the most tantalizing things I can. Thank you for participating. Susanne Dutton, author of “Sherlock Holmes and the Remaining Improbable”

  1. Thank you, Christine. I hope you are not disappointed. It’s a wild ride, just 140 pages and taking place, in real time, just over two days. Here Holmes meets himself coming and going and comes up against Watson’s opinion of him, “The best and wisest man I have ever known.”

    • Hi Rosie. Thank you for participating. I’m glad to hear I shared something that attracts. One gets so close to the book in writing it, it’s hard to judge. Susanne Dutton, author

  2. Book souns fantastic and intriguing. Would love to read & review in print format.
    Who influences you most to write?

    • Hello Crystal. I have had good teachers who encouraged me, parents who paid attention, friends who were willing to read, writing groups who questioned and applauded, and something essential inside that insisted. Thank you for taking part in the tour. Susanne Dutton

        • Thank you, Christine. I hope you are not disappointed. It’s a wild ride, just 140 pages and taking place, in real time, just over two days. Here Holmes meets himself coming and going and comes up against Watson’s opinion of him, “The best and wisest man I have ever known.”