venusinthenight: joan watson and sherlock holmes walking down the street (elementary - sherlock/joan)
[personal profile] venusinthenight
Title: The Five Doctors
Author: [archiveofourown.org profile] gardnerhill
Pairing: None
Length: 10,006 words
Rating: Teen
Warnings: Author did not give warnings (see reccer's comments)
Verse: Elementary, ACD Canon, BBC Sherlock, My Dearly Beloved Detective, Ritchieverse, Granada Holmes, Rathbone Holmes (films)
Author's summary: Great minds think alike.

Reccer's comments: So many Watsons and so many Holmeses! Joan being a BAMF and being the Default Watson! Crack treated seriously! Such a good read.

There is some brief Victorian Era-typical racism (specifically orientalism) and misogyny
sanguinity: woodcut by M.C. Escher, "Snakes" (Default)
[personal profile] sanguinity
Title: Untitled Roxburgh "The Hound of the Baskerville" sketches
Author: [deviantart.com profile] wandarer3
Pairing: Gen, Sherlock Holmes & John Watson
Rating: G
Warnings: none
Verse: The Hound of the Baskervilles (2002), Richard Roxburgh and Ian Hart
Artist's summary: sketch from film "The Hound of the Baskervilles" 2002

Reccer's comments: Lovely, evocative sketches of scenes from the 2002 version of The Hound of the Baskervilles. I'm particularly taken with this joint portrait (sketch 29) and its subtle tension between the two men: Holmes' assured confidence front-and-center, while Watson, measured in his discontent, is partially clipped by the frame. There are also two nice individual portraits: Richard Roxburgh's Holmes with his cat-has-the-canary smile, and Hart's windblown Watson on the Tor (sketch 28).

The Roxburgh sketches are collected within the artist's multi-adaptation Sherlock Holmes gallery (which includes BBC, ACD, Granada, and a very nice but easy-to-miss Study in Emerald). I particularly recommend the Roxburgh sketches, of course, but there are other things to enjoy in the collection, as well.
scfrankles: knight on horseback with lance lowered (Default)
[personal profile] scfrankles
Title: Nanti Polari
Author: Iwantthatcoat
Pairing: Sherlock Holmes/John Watson
Length: 5,931 words
Rating: Teen
Warnings: N/A
Verse: Rathbone Films
Author's summary: If my brother isn’t sleeping with Watson, why would he possibly wish to spend this much time around the idiot? They seem to work as a reasonably efficient unit, but, how? And why? We all want those very same answers, Mycroft. Hopefully this fic provides just that, with a bit of history thrown in the mix.

Reccer's comments: Watching the Rathbone films on TV was probably my first proper introduction to Sherlock Holmes. They’re best known for being set mainly during WWII, Watson seems significantly older than Holmes and… he’s a bit dim. That last one is difficult to get past once you’ve been introduced to the ‘real’ Watson in other versions—not least in the original ACD canon. Why on earth would Holmes want to be friends with the version Nigel Bruce portrays?

In this fic the author attempts to answer that question. Accepting Watson as he appears in the films but then digging deeper to show he is much, much more than a buffoon, and also taking the opportunity to examine Holmes’ personality and the relationship between the two men.

The story takes the time period seriously and doesn’t gloss over what a terrible time those war years were, but there is plenty of fun and humour too. And there is the added delight that the fic features a whole conversation in Polari. It’s all just fantabulosa!
venusinthenight: joan watson listening to sherlock (elementary - joan sits and listens)
[personal profile] venusinthenight
Title: бонус (Bonus)
Author: [personal profile] gardnerhill
Pairing: None
Length: 396 words
Rating: Gen
Warnings: None apply
Verse: My Dearly Beloved Detective
Author's summary: Freedom can reside in a simple change of clothes.

Reccer's comments: My Dearly Beloved Detective has a female Holmes (Shirley) and a female Watson (Jane) -- one of only a tiny handful of Holmesian 'verses with this configuration. This focuses on Jane, and how she practices at presenting more traditionally male, along with musings on male presentation as protection in sexist Edwardian London.
sanguinity: woodcut by M.C. Escher, "Snakes" (Escher Snakes)
[personal profile] sanguinity
Title: Hounded
Author: Random Phantom
Pairing: Gen
Length: 23K words
Rating: K (suitable for most ages)
Verse: The Hound of the Baskervilles (Roxburgh and Hart, 2002)
Author's summary: My entry into Challenge 010 at the Watson's Woes livejournal; an AU story featuring an alternative ending to the 2002 Hound of the Baskervilles. Watson has to face the hound by himself; and the consequences change him in a way he never expected.

Reccer's comments: Ian Hart's Watson was a paragon among Watsons—competent, skilled, active, noble, and valiant—and in "Hounded" he continues to show his stuff. In this AU of the film, Watson gets to Sir Henry in time to save him from being savaged by the Hound, but at the cost of being savaged himself.

But not just savaged, because that dog wasn't just an abnormally large hunting hound. ;-)

What follows is a solid adventure with an ample dose of hurt/comfort. Watson retains his pawky sense of humor (and all the other noble traits we love him for), and Holmes rises to the occasion, determined to be the most loyal friend a new werewolf could want.

Happily, no familiarity with the Roxburgh film is needed, as "Hounded" goes AU from the film just before the film goes AU from the novel. If you already know the basic plot of HOUN, you're in great shape. Furthermore, the fraught Holmes-and-Watson relationship in the film is absent from this story, so again, no familiarity with the film is needed. (This Holmes reminds me more of Cushing or Brett than of Roxburgh; I personally do not consider this a fault, but ymmv.)

"Hounded" also has an incomplete sequel, "The Hour of the Wolf," which is a little angstier in tone than the original. It currently stands at 40K words, and was last updated in 2010. I found it a satisfying read, but I mostly just wanted more Holmes and Watson being good partners to each other — which it delivered, despite the incomplete plot arc.
[identity profile] bowl-of-glow.livejournal.com
Title: Untitled
Artist: nitefise-art
Verse: Russian Sherlock Holmes series (2013)

Author's summary: A load of Panin sketches because his expressions are the best. And this is just the first two episodes.
Reccer's comments: It always makes me happy to see fanworks for this (underrated) series! These lovely sketches capture some of Watson's expressions perfectly. The fact that they are on a notebook also reminds me of Watson's own drawings from the series' opening credits, which I think is a nice touch.
ext_1620665: knight on horseback (knight)
[identity profile] scfrankles.livejournal.com
Title: Everything is Watson
Author: gardnerhill
Pairing: Gen
Length: 2,897 words
Rating: G
Warnings: None
Verse: Sherlock Holmes and the Hound of the Baskervilles [AKA LEGO Hound of the Baskervilles (Tuzarfilms)] / The LEGO Movie (2014)
Author's summary: Watson is still recuperating from his last adventure – he’s not so sure he wants to be The Special.

Reccer's comments: I was introduced to Sherlock Holmes and the Hound of the Baskervilles, AKA LEGO Hound, last autumn and I loved it. (It’s a delightful little film on YouTube—only 42 minutes long. There’s a link in the author’s notes if you want to take a look.) And when I signed up for Holmestice the following month, more in hope than expectation I added it to my list of wants.

So I was thrilled when my assigned author chose to write something in this ‘verse. The film is deliberately cracky but the makers clearly love Holmes and Watson and their relationship, and have huge respect for their source material. In her fic [livejournal.com profile] gardnerhill keeps that delicate balance so well. And her idea of doing a crossover with the official LEGO Movie was inspired. I must admit I still haven’t seen that but I found a quick look at the trailers and other info on IMDB got me caught up enough. And you really don’t need to have seen either film to enjoy this story.

The fic begins just after Holmes and Watson have returned back to London from Dartmoor. They are confronted by a strange young woman who—somewhat to Holmes’ chagrin—seems to think Watson is the special one. And so a very funny adventure begins, filled with wonderful characters and brilliant lines—and Watson remaining resolutely and amusingly unimpressed throughout by The Prophecy that says only he can bring down the villain...
swissmarg: Mrs Hudson (Molly)
[personal profile] swissmarg
Title: Untitled photoset
Artist: naturalshocks
Pairing: Gen, Sherlock Holmes
Rating: Not rated, SFW
Warnings: None
Verse: Elementary, BBC, ACD (Brett), TPLOSH, Russian (Livanov), Ritchie, House, Doctor Who (Madame Vastra)

Reccer's comments: There was a lot of incredible art that came out of this year's Inktober, and this artist is one of my favs. This set in particular is such a great homage to Sherlock Holmes in his many incarnations. I love how each portrait captures the essence of each particular portrayal, not just in the visual likenesses but in the emotional nuances: Miller's aloneness, Brett's romanticism, Downey's cockiness, Cumberbatch's anticipation of the chase. They are all Holmes, yet they are all themselves and they are all beautiful.
[identity profile] phoenixfalls.livejournal.com
Title: Something Good (Will Come From That)
Music Title & Artist: Would You Like to Take a Walk? by The Sunshine Boys
Vidder: [livejournal.com profile] sanguinity
Pairing or Character: Holmes & Watson
Verse: 54 different adaptations - see full list at vid page
Link: AO3 | tumblr
Reccer's Comments:
For me, this is the ultimate Holmes & Watson vid. [livejournal.com profile] sanguinity summarized it as "100 years of moving pictures about Holmes & Watson," and that is exactly what it is and yet it conveys none of the sheer majesty that is the result. As I noted above, sanguinity used 54 different adaptations as source material -- all the biggies are there, BBC Sherlock, the Ritchie/RDJ movies, Granada, Elementary; the less common but still not unexpected adaptations like both Russian Holmes series, The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes, and Young Sherlock Holmes; several different Holmesian cartoons like The Great Mouse Detective, Sherlock Hound, and Sherlock Holmes in the 22nd Century; silent movies and web series like Herlock and entirely fanmade 'verses like 221B Baker Towers; and adaptations from Japan, China, Korea, India, and Brazil in addition to the Anglophonic and Russian adaptations we're more familiar with. It's very, very tempting to call the vid "all the Holmeses and all the Watsons," but I don't recommend doing so because sanguinity will immediately pop up to explain exactly how many Holmeses & Watsons didn't make the cut.

But the sheer genius of the vid, beyond its scope, is how much a love letter it is, not only to Holmes & Watson but to fandom and fannishness in general. Because the way sanguinity put all these sources together, arranged around themes like walking arm in arm, or Holmes torturing Watson with his violin, or Reichenbach, highlights how in conversation they all are with each other. All the adaptations are, after all, fanworks of one original canon; and cut together like this there is a amazing sense of Holmesiana being one enormous, chaotic, joyous fandom, spanning decades and continents. The effect is delightful, overwhelming in the best way, and utterly charming.

And once you've watched the vid a couple (hundred) times, I strongly recommend reading the commentary posted as chapters 2 & 3 at the AO3 link. The process of sourcing and making the vid (and the various ways sanguinity cut down the multitude of adaptations into something manageable) is fascinating. But more than that, watching so many adaptations in a fairly close time frame (and with an eye to using them for a vid) gave sanguinity a unique perspective on how Holmes & Watson get interpreted in visual canons. She discusses how technological changes affected adaptational styles; the rise and fall of various tropes (it apparently has not always been the case that it is "always 1895"!); diversity in casting; and the relative shippiness of different adaptations. Reading about the vid is just as rewarding as watching the vid itself, even at 9,000 words. :)
[identity profile] phoenixfalls.livejournal.com
Title: Art in the Blood AO3|LJ
Author: [livejournal.com profile] rachelindeed
Pairing: Gen
Length: 4,741 words
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: None
Verse: Murder by Decree
Author's summary: After the events of Murder by Decree, Mycroft Holmes leaves the British government and tries to decide what to do with the rest of his life.
Reccer's comments:
This is, quite simply, an incredible Mycroft fic. I don’t know the movie it’s based on, but rachelindeed has helpfully included a (spoilery) summary in the notes at the beginning of the fic, and the fic is entirely comprehensible with just that information. It’s a fantastic exploration of Mycroft’s character, less Machiavellian than he is often portrayed but still very much the brilliant man whose “specialism is omniscience.” He starts the fic at a crossroads, wondering where to take his life next, and where he takes it is a delightful surprise. There’s a nod to larger Holmesiana that I won’t spoil but which made me burst into laughter; there are so many quiet, touching character moments, for Mycroft himself and for the Holmes brothers and for Sherlock & Watson; and the ending of the fic is deeply moving. It’s a fic that just grows and grows as you read it, developing layers and shades of meaning and building to a resolution that brought tears to my eyes.
[identity profile] rachelindeed.livejournal.com
Title: There Is No Death
Author: lyricalprose (fairylights)
Pairing: Gen
Length: 4,300 words
Rating: Teen
Warnings: none
Verse: Sherlock BBC, fusion with Star Wars
Author's summary: "He's a freak, you know." Donovan's sneer bleeds into her voice. "A Jedi washout. Such a nutter that even the damn mystics didn't want him." John and Sherlock - a long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away.

Reccer's comments: Here we are at the end of the month, and given that a new, good Star Wars movie has recently come out to restore fandom love for that galaxy far, far away, let's celebrate with this thoughtful, interesting piece. It explores Sherlock and John from their pre-series experiences through 'A Study in Pink,' all re-imagined to fit beautifully within the Star Wars universe. I find Sherlock's history particularly interesting here, especially his brush with the Dark Side and the battle within him between his addictions and his determination to control his own mind. A fascinating character study that traces an iconoclastic Jedi drop-out and a war-torn rebel medic who wind their way through great perils only to find each other and begin their shared journey with, dare I say it, a new hope.

Please note, the story is marked as the first in a series, but the intended sequels never arrived, so it is a standalone. However, it works wonderfully as a oneshot, and I hope you will enjoy it!

As always, I have really enjoyed sharing some of my favorite stories this month, thank you all and thanks to the mods for keeping this comm alive <3
[identity profile] chapbook.livejournal.com
Title: Arthur Conan Doyle & Sherlock Holmes
Artist: isskra
Pairing: Gen
Rating: G
Warnings: none
Verse: Sherlock BBC, Elementary, Ritchie films, Granada, Rathbone, Livanov
Author's summary: none

Reccer's comments: A beautiful homage to Doyle (who would be so disappointed that we pay more attention to Holmes than spiritualism) and many adaptations of his fantastic character Sherlock Holmes. I adore skilled linework and we get that in spades here. Also compelling is how the artist differentiates each Holmes in some way, from Sherlock considering the cabbie's pill in ASiP to Brett's Holmes coolly examining the dancing men.
sanguinity: woodcut by M.C. Escher, "Snakes" (Escher Snakes)
[personal profile] sanguinity
Music Title & Artist: Christina Perri, “A Thousand Years”
Vidder: irondeficientbull | redhandsredribbons
Pairing or Character: Holmes/Watson
Verse: Multi (Rathbone, Granada, Ritchie, Sherlock, and Elementary)
Link: tumblr announcement post
Reccer's Comments:

From quiet moments at home to Reichenbach and back again, Holmes and Watson have loved each other for well over a century now, and will love each other for at least that long again to come.
venusinthenight: a camera in a woman's hands (stock - camera in hands)
[personal profile] venusinthenight
Title: A Study in Holmeses
Artist: Taryn Knight (taryndraws on Tumblr)
Pairing: Gen
Rating: G
Warnings: None
Verse: Rathbone, Granada, Ritchie films, Sherlock BBC
Artist's summary: no summary given

Reccer's comments: Profile illustrations of four different Holmes. Namely, Basil Rathbone's, Jeremy Brett's, RDJ's, and Cumberbatch's. It's great to see how different, and sometimes how similar, each Holmes looks. Fantastic artist.
[identity profile] rachelindeed.livejournal.com
Title: Sherlock Holmes Dr. John Watson Say My Name (Multiverse)
Music Title & Artist: "Say My Name" by Within Temptation
Vidder: quantum861
Pairing or Character: vidder did not specify pairing; the characters are Sherlock Holmes and John Watson
Verse: Multiple: Sherlock BBC, Ritchie films, Granada, Rathbone films, and Spielberg's Young Sherlock Holmes film
Link: Note: this is a YouTube link: Say My Name

Reccer's Comments: This is a lovely vid about the timeless connection between Sherlock Holmes and John Watson. It keeps up a very fast pace with an incredible number of quick edits which spin the song's lyrics in interesting directions and create striking visual parallels between moments in multiple versions of the characters. With the simple line "I breathe the air," for example, we see the fog of modern Baskerville, the reviving gasp of RDJ's near-dead Holmes, the smoking lamp of Granada's Devil's Foot, and the choking atmosphere of Rathbone's Spider Woman.

The song's chorus summarizes the powerful theme of the vid: "I cross the borders of time, leaving today behind to be with you again."

Note: The vid's effects include quick zooms and occasional brief flashing effects, so if you are visually sensitive you may want to be careful.
[identity profile] sussexdowns.livejournal.com
Title: Home is Where
Author: [livejournal.com profile] rat_chan
Pairing: Basil/Dawson, with past Basil/Ratigan
Length: 2180 words
Rating: PG
Warnings: Mentions of (canon) character death.
Verse: Great Mouse Detective
Author's summary: Dawson comes home to (yet again) find Basil in deep contemplation of Ratigan's portrait. He's not sure why this bothers him so much, but he is very sure why he's shocked when Basil explains about his and Ratigan's secret past...

Reccer's comments: This is somehow both hilarious and kind of heartbreaking. Hilarious because THEY ARE MICE. They are so clearly mice. [livejournal.com profile] rat_chan does a marvelous job of keeping the fact that these are anthropomorphic rodents very clear without making it heavy-handed or intrusive on the narrative. They've also managed to make Ratigan a vaguely sympathetic character which takes some skill, imo, since all the movie gave us was a one-dimensional villain. And also, what could be more adorable than anthropomorphic mice in love?

I think we need a Great Mouse Detective tag up in here!
[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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