swissmarg: Mrs Hudson (Molly)
[personal profile] swissmarg
Title: I Found
Music Title & Artist: I Found by Amber Run
Vidder: Eurippa See on Youtube / lifetenwaystillthursday on tumblr
Pairing or Character: Sherlock Holmes/John Watson
Verse: Sherlock BBC (TAB)
Link: Vidder's announcement on tumblr
Vidder's Summary: A short little fanvid to help with the emotions of having seen the Sherlock Special and also having to wait another year for another episode.

Reccer's Comments: I’ll be honest, I didn’t see The Abominable Bride as the gayest episode ever. I mean, yes, Moriarty and the gun, the moment in the greenhouse, but overall I didn’t feel like the whole point of the episode was John and Sherlock’s relationship. This video just might change my mind. It’s beautifully angsty and heartbreaking, depicting a yearning, lonely Holmes escaping what he believes to be unrequited love (or maybe just a love that’s impossible to consummate) through drugs. I especially like that this remains entirely within the Victorian era, and the final shot gave me shivers.
[identity profile] chapbook.livejournal.com
Title: I've Made a Mess of You, Watson
Artist: khorazir
Pairing: Sherlock/John
Rating: T
Warnings: none
Verse: Sherlock BBC

Author's summary: “I’ve made a mess of you, Watson.”
Some Victorian moustache twirling inspired by this lovely ficlet by @hudders-and-hiddles.


Reccer's comments: I adore the tender, besotted expressions on the boys' faces as TAB!Sherlock fixes the moustache of TAB!John. Bonus: the rendering of the different textures and details like the curl that has escaped Sherlock's coiffure.
[identity profile] chapbook.livejournal.com
Title: Sherlock's Dreamwork: The Client Chair
Author: plaidadder
Pairing: Gen
Length: 1,051
Rating: G
Warnings: none
Verse: Sherlock BBC

Author's summary: None. A meta on TAB as Sherlock's dreamworld, specifically looking at how Mary is treated in contrast to the other women in the episode and what that might say about Sherlock's state of mind regarding Mary in the wake of HLV.

Reccer's comments: Although TAB is just one episode and a "special" at that, it is such a structurally and symbolically rich work that it is inspiring some interesting, thoughtful meta.

As TAB is not historical fiction, but rather a Mind Palace episode powerfully influenced by an overdose of drugs and interrupted only once or twice by the show’s waking “reality”, it makes sense to analyze it as a dream. Although I don't think this meta’s central argument represents the key to the entire episode as claimed, I certainly agree that it helps us understand one of the two central stories that are interwoven in this brilliant bit of television: 1) Sherlock’s fantasy remixing of HLV and 2) the mystery tied to Moriarty’s seeming return and its link to Sherlock's struggle to acknowledge the legitimacy of his emotions and embodiment.

The story that is explored so well in this meta is a re-working-out of HLV in a way that allows Sherlock to give John who he thinks John wants: "Mary", someone who Sherlock believes is better than himself, “an unprincipled drug addict”. Plaidadder notes that Mary is set apart from the “brides” and their conspiracy, who, as demonstrated by the mystery’s solution, “can be endlessly substituted for each other”. Moreover, unlike them Mary is doubled: she is the inverse of the brides in her black veil and dress, but she is also the spy who finds the brides before “Holmes” does. Sherlock, plaidadder argues, “quarantines” Mary’s real-life recklessness, propensity for violence, and remorselessness by assigning them to the brides, giving her instead the roles of a clever and selflessly patriotic spy and loyal, if put-upon, wife. Such a woman should be an ideal spouse for John, yet the fractured narrative and symbolism of the dream/Mind Palace hint that however competent and selfless Mary is in this dream world, she still may be a terrible denger to John and Sherlock in the show’s reality. As plaidadder points out, Mary in a widow’s attire suggests that she has lost her husband. On the surface it’s a passive-aggressive protest over John’s lack of interest in married life and her; but the choice of black is also the same color as her assassin’s gear the night she mortally wounded Sherlock. Mary is not just a dissatisfied woman just dressed like a widow, she is also an expert assassin who almost certainly has been a widow-maker and seems quite capable of making herself a widow for real if she felt it necessary. No amount of ret-conning by Sherlock can erase this. Because of her dangerous past actions and lack of repentance, at least part of Sherlock’s mind seems to question to whether she is truly refomed. Remember what Lestrade asked her: “Are you for or against?” It may be only a moment of pro-feminist humour, but I suspect it may also be Sherlock—remember the characters are of Sherlock’s constructing and represent at certain times his perception of them and at others different aspects of his own psyche—wondering if she can truly be trusted, even as he also tries to sell himself on the idea that Mary is the worthy partner of John.

In the end, Sherlock appears to have solved the Moriarty-related mystery and even made a bit of progress regarding his emotions and embodiment, but Mary remains, for now, a unsolved mystery.
[identity profile] chapbook.livejournal.com
Title: Abstinence is Not Immortality
Artist: deebzy
Pairing: Sherlock/John
Rating: T
Warnings: none
Verse: Sherlock BBC

Author's summary: None. A fancomic inspired by the glasshouse scene in TAB.

Reccer's comments: A lovely fancomic that makes the subtext of the glasshouse scene text. If you are wondering about this, one likely source of inspiration for the scene is the conversation between Holmes and Watson in Billy Wilder's heartbreaking film The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes. This scene had a powerful impact on Mark Gatiss, as he writes in the Guardian:

It's a fantastically melancholy film. The relationship between Sherlock and Watson is treated beautifully; Sherlock effectively falls in love with him in the film, but it's so desperately unspoken. There's an amazing scene where, to get out of a situation where a Russian ballerina wants Sherlock to father her child, he claims Watson and he are gay. Watson is outraged and, when he calms down, speaks of the women all over the world who could attest to his sexuality. He says to Sherlock, "You do too, don't you?" Holmes is silent, and Watson says, "Am I being presumptuous? There have been women, haven't there?" Holmes says, "The answer is yes – you are being presumptuous." Sensational.

I particularly like the spareness and rhythm of this comic, as well as the terrific use of a callback to ASiP in a way that mirrors the way the waking and dream worlds of TAB are occasionally intercut.
[identity profile] chapbook.livejournal.com
Title: TAB!Sherlock and John Dancing
Artist: waltzingdetective
Pairing: Sherlock/John
Rating: G
Warnings: none
Verse: Sherlock BBC
Author's summary: dancing victorian husbands in their dressing gowns

Reccer's comments: Tender, intimate moment between TAB!Victorian!Sherlock and John, perhaps after the episode's final scene. John's bent knees and the placement of his right foot evoke the moment of turning, as the boys melt together.
[identity profile] chapbook.livejournal.com
Title: Untitled Maths Meta on Mycroft's Notebook in TAB
Author: toxicsemicolon (author of this meta) and cosmoglaut (the one who identified the equations)
Pairing: Gen
Length: 265
Rating: G
Warnings: none
Verse: Sherlock BBC

Author's summary: None. A meta explaining the metaphorical meaning of the mathematical equations in Mycroft's notebook in TAB.

Reccer's comments: The enigmatic inscriptions in Mycroft's notebook in one of the modern scenes of TAB have garnered plenty of fan attention. Cosmoglaut identified the mathematical equations (post linked in the article) and then toxicsemicolon explained their metaphorical meaning. It's elegant and brilliant and altogether lovely that someone decided to put two such appropriate equations referencing John Watson in that notebook.
[identity profile] unovis.livejournal.com
Hi!
Just a few words on our tags and tagging your recs.

Tags are useful search tools for grouping the recs by categories: by pairing, genre, content, and sources for the stories or other fanworks.

We ask that reccers attach tags that are relevant to the works they rec. You don't have to add everything that applies-- for example, not a character tag for everyone who might appear in the story, or every theme or content. But if Molly has a significant cameo, say, that you think people searching for her might appreciate, then by all means list her in a tag. Likewise if you think this is the addiction story people should read, then use the content: addiction tag.

The required aspects to tag are pairing (if it applies), relationship genre (i.e., gen, slash, or het*), and verse (the source: ACD books, Sherlock BBC, Granada, etc.).

The easiest place to see all of the tags available is in this list of tags.

Tagging is enabled only for the author of the post and the mods. Only the mods can add new tags. We have a beginning list up now, anticipating likely categories and characters. We'll add more as recs are made, if characters and pairings, for example, aren't covered already. You can request a new tag to be added by commenting here or by contacting one of the mods. Keep in mind, again, that we'll be adding character tags as additional characters appear in recs.

Sherlock Holmes and John Watson have been abbreviated as SH and JW in pairings and some other places (e.g., content: sick jw). Since this recs comm is open to all versions of Sherlock Holmes, it seemed the simplest way to identify the characters. Lestrade, Gregson, and Dimmock are listed as "inspector" following ACD book canon, and Moriarty is listed only once by his (their) surname alone. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle is abbreviated throughout as ACD.

*We won't add a category for "slash-if-you-squint" or similar invitations for the reader to see subtext in a story. If the author hasn't labeled her work as slash, then it's genre: gen or genre: friendship.

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