Greetings,
I have a question. Since Arthur Conan Doyle created the character, Sherlock Holmes, one year before the Whitechapel murders, would it be safe to assume these murders may have influenced the popularity of the Sherlock Holmes mysteries. If the population was in fear of an unknown killer, reading a fictional character who always solves the case might have helped calm fears. A mondern day example is the TV series 24. The post 9/11 twin towers incident made this show ripe for an eager audience. Am I way off?
Sincerely,
Mike
I have a question. Since Arthur Conan Doyle created the character, Sherlock Holmes, one year before the Whitechapel murders, would it be safe to assume these murders may have influenced the popularity of the Sherlock Holmes mysteries. If the population was in fear of an unknown killer, reading a fictional character who always solves the case might have helped calm fears. A mondern day example is the TV series 24. The post 9/11 twin towers incident made this show ripe for an eager audience. Am I way off?
Sincerely,
Mike
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