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The Patient's Eyes (2004)

The Patient's Eyes (2004)

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3.8 of 5 Votes: 3
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ISBN
0099478781 (ISBN13: 9780099478782)
Language
English
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About book The Patient's Eyes (2004)

I have been looking for a series for quite some time now without any luck. While 'The Patient's Eyes' is the first in a trilogy rather than a series I'm happy to say that I thoroughly enjoyed this novel and I'm eagerly looking forward to reading all three books by David Pirie.Pirie, a longtime fan of Arthur Conan Doyle, writes the fictional memoir of Doyle's early experiences as a medical student of Joseph Bell's at the University of Edinburgh. Dr. Bell is widely believed to be the inspiration for Sherlock Holmes. Doyle's position as Bell's clerk introduce him to Bell's confidential investigative work with the police and his controversial methods of deduction.Pirie offers Doyle's reflection on his relationship with Dr. Bell and the differences between their relationship and that of Holmes and Dr. Watson. "The honest truth is my relations with the Doctor never precisely mirrored the smooth cordiality between the two detectives in my fiction. Even there, I occasionally allowed a touch of asperity to show itself and this was but the tiniest hint of the true state of affairs: namely that for many years I could not easily reconcile myself to my mentor.""When I first encountered him I was having to come to terms with my own family problem and, not much later, the urgent need to make a living. All this made our collaboration uneasy. But in my heart I know there is much more to it."Pirie also alludes to a Doyle's relationship with a woman named Elsbeth and how it comes to a horrible end but never elaborates on what exactly happens.I enjoy reading fiction set in Victorian times and expected some gritty Victorian details. However, there are less period details than I expected but I was not disappointed by this because the story is told in a very realistic way. Attention is paid to the details that are important and relevant and the ones you would expect to be remembered by someone recounting the past. This story had all the right ingredients to satisfy my tastes. It was realistic, logical and suspenseful. The mystery was creepy and had some surprising twists, while the characters were realistic, human and emotional. The emotional relationships between Doyle and Bell as well as the mystery surrounding Elsbeth really pulled me in. I loved the whole premise of the book and the perspective that Pirie gives Doyle, I thought it was all very well done and satisfying. The only criticism I have is that the interjection of the story about The Beale cipher slowed the pace and momentum of the story when it was at its climax. I've already started reading the second in the trilogy 'The Night Calls' while the third 'The Dark Water' is waiting on top of the pile next to the bed. I wish David Pirie would write more fiction like this!

The Patient's Eyes is a dark crime novel about a young and down on his luck Arthur Conan Doyle and his mentor Joseph Bell, the real life Sherlock Holmes. Both form a duo that is at once like and quite different from Holmes and Watson, thus offering a fresh take on well known characters. The book is of course full of Sherlockian bits and pieces, with a good measure of Edgar Allan Poe thrown in.Doyle himself could have been written by Poe: melancholic and traumatised by things that happened while he was still working with Bell in Edinburgh, things he frequently alludes too but never fully explains. Which is a bit frustrating but also leaves you wanting more.Bell is a bit more cheerful, at least on the surface. They aren't exactly friends (Doyle is quite critical of Bell and doesn't seem to like him very much), but there were some genuinely heart-warming moments between them. The most interesting aspect of the novel, to me, was that everything that happened throughout the story, supposedly served Doyle as inspiration for his own stories. So what made him turn Watson into Holmes' friend and admirer? I'm definitely looking forward to reading the next two books.

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David Pirie, the author, claims that Arthur Conan Doyle based the charactor of Sherlock Holmes on a real person, Dr. Joseph Bell. This book features Doyle and Bell as the main characters. When the impoverished young Arthur Doyle opens his first medical practice, he is puzzled by the symptoms presented by Heather Grace, a sweet young woman whose parents have died tragically several years before. Heather has a strange eye complaint, but is also upset by visions of a phantom bicyclist, who vanishes as soon as he is followed. But this enigma is soon overshadowed as Doyle finds himself embroiled in more threatening events-including the murder of a rich Spanish businessman-that call for the advice of the eminent Dr. Bell. But Dr. Bell dismisses the murder of Senor Garcia as a rather unimportant diversion from the incident which Bell considers to have real criminal implications: the matter of the solitary cyclist-and the patient's eyes... I liked the book, even though it had a lot of tedius detail, dialogue and behaviors typical of the setting's time period. The plot was a bit off the wall and the solution was surprising and not quite satisfying.
—Mary

A fairly enjoyable read, but not one that I feel will stick with me. I'm trying to put my finger on what exactly I didn't love about the book.I think the main problem for me was pacing. This book is the first in a series, and it seems that the story is told in a strange order. Doyle and Bell meet, Doyle becomes his clerk, and then suddenly several years have gone by. Doyle is constantly referring to a terrible case that occurred somewhere in that intervening time, but he never gives us more than the basic details and tantalising hints. I feel like that time jump cheats the reader out of seeing the friendship develop between Doyle and Bell. They go from teacher and clerk to friends, but we never see how that happened. It made the friendship a bit hard to buy into for me. We are just expected to take their word for it that their relationship has progressed to friendship without much evidence.Bell was an interesting character and was the brightest spot in the book for me. He is not Sherlock Holmes, but one can see how he acted as the inspiration for the character. The sections at the beginning when Doyle is trying to figure out exactly what Bell does in his office were excellent.Doyle was less interesting to me. I had a difficult time connecting with him. At times he felt a bit too simple and naive, but maybe that's what Pirie was going for. The beginning of the book with older-Doyle describing his case files was fascinating to me.I believe that the second book in the series deals with that mysterious case in Doyle and Bell's past. I think I'll pick up the second book to see if shedding some light on that incident helps my enjoyment of the story.The mysteries were quite good. Pirie takes well-known Holmes cases and puts a spin on them. The main mystery here is based on the Solitary Cyclist. It makes you think you know what's going to happen, but Pirie puts a great twist on the ending that I really enjoyed.Overall, it was an enjoyable read with some flashes of brilliance, but I felt disconnected from the story most of the time. I still think I'll continue with the series, just to see how it all plays out.
—Stephanie

Combines elements from different Holmes stories and puts them in new settings, together with new material, so that even a reader thoroughly familiar with the original stories is hard pressed to predict the solution to each mystery. If anything, their fresh setting heightens the frisson of pleasurable recognition over each transplanted element.With the device of presenting stories about Bell and Doyle rather than Holmes and Watson, Pirie is free to jettison the parts of the duo's personalities that recent adaptations emphasize (e.g. Holmes' Asperger's syndrome) and develop characters that are at once familiar and different. It may be scandalous to say so, but Pirie is more successful than the original stories at working Watson/Doyle’s profession of doctor into the plot.The novel skips over an incident that happened soon after Doyle’s and Bell’s first meeting, but keeps hinting at it (Bell standing on a beach). I kept expecting the novel to eventually fill in this incident, but oddly it never did, perhaps saving it for a sequel.
—Lee

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