Twisted lips, speckled bands and six Napoleonic men are three stories that show their popularity. The story of prose Sherlock Holmes of Sherlock Holmes is still very popular, "Lips distorted man", "Band band" and "Six Napoleon" are three stories that show their popularity. They are very popular due to the competitive factors between Sherlock Holmes and the readers. Clues to three stories are presented for the benefit of the reader. Another reason they are so popular is that these crimes are unusual and challenging for readers and Holmes.
In the story of the five Sherlock Holmes we read, I will write a story about "silver flame", "spot", and "twisted men". Holmes, 221 Baker Street was one of the most famous and memorable detectives of his time. Sherlock Holmes is different from other imaginary detectives. Holmes is known for its ability to observe and interpret. Although Holmes can change his age and sex to solve this problem, most people's head is earmuffs and his travel cap with a pipe in the mouth.
There is no more famous detective, novel or reality of Sherlock Holmes created by the service shop Conan Doyle. "Spot adventure" in "Adventures of Sherlock Holmes" is the story of author Sherlock Holmes' favorite of readers. Therefore, many students are assigned the literary analysis of this short story and are exploring chaotic and good and evil themes. Students of all ages explored the conflict between the danger of group thought and reasonable and irrational and moral and immorality and read the classic novel by King of the Fly, William Golding. How the character is a group of young boys trapped in the island and struggling to survive, this is a fable of contemporary society
The mottled band adventure was written by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle in the February 1892 version of Strand. Since The Twips Lip was published last month, The Speclesled Band is the story of 56 short Sherlock Holmes. Helen Stoner's sisters died in a strange situation, and this death proved to be one of the earliest examples of criminal novels, the mystery of "locking the room". Later, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle adopted this kind of problem in "Adventure of the Sky" and "Adventure of the Crooked Man"; of course, since the Conan-Doyle era, criminal writers used closed-room problems did