Series Rec: Arte Regendus
Oct. 20th, 2013 03:25 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Title: Arte Regendus
Author:
Violsva
Pairing: Holmes/Watson, Watson/Morstan
Length: 48,939 words in 8 parts so far (updated 22 Oct 2013)
Rating: G to M
Warnings: None
Verse: ACD Books
Author's summary: None provided for the series. Summary for part 1: Sherlock Holmes’ new fellow lodger is ordinary enough. There ought to be no reason for Holmes to adjust his habits in any way for him. Certainly he shouldn’t require the other man’s presence merely in order to work.
Reccer's comments: This series follows the canon time line and career of Holmes and Watson, from their taking up lodging together through several cases and Watson's marriage to Mary Morstan, and beyond. There is a good balance of casework and relationship stuff, with just a smidgen of smut thrown in.
Each installment is told by a different character, so we get not only Holmes and Watson's points of view, but Mary's as well, as in this excerpt from part 5, But by Degrees:
( Excerpt... )
What makes this series particularly delicious to me is everything that the main actors are hiding from each other: their actions, their feelings, their desires, their true characters. The love triangle is heart-wrenching, with both Holmes and Watson trying not to hurt each other or Mary, but unable to let go. It's Victorian pining and stiff upper lips at their best.As of the latest installment (part 7) we have not quite arrived at the showdown with Moriarty, so I have hopes that the series will continue. Update: The author has just posted part 8, which covers Reichenbach and the hiatus. One can only hope that the return is next...
Author:
Pairing: Holmes/Watson, Watson/Morstan
Length: 48,939 words in 8 parts so far (updated 22 Oct 2013)
Rating: G to M
Warnings: None
Verse: ACD Books
Author's summary: None provided for the series. Summary for part 1: Sherlock Holmes’ new fellow lodger is ordinary enough. There ought to be no reason for Holmes to adjust his habits in any way for him. Certainly he shouldn’t require the other man’s presence merely in order to work.
Reccer's comments: This series follows the canon time line and career of Holmes and Watson, from their taking up lodging together through several cases and Watson's marriage to Mary Morstan, and beyond. There is a good balance of casework and relationship stuff, with just a smidgen of smut thrown in.
Each installment is told by a different character, so we get not only Holmes and Watson's points of view, but Mary's as well, as in this excerpt from part 5, But by Degrees:
( Excerpt... )
What makes this series particularly delicious to me is everything that the main actors are hiding from each other: their actions, their feelings, their desires, their true characters. The love triangle is heart-wrenching, with both Holmes and Watson trying not to hurt each other or Mary, but unable to let go. It's Victorian pining and stiff upper lips at their best.