About This Book
Professor Challenger and his friends meet strange adventures and
prehistoric creatures in the Amazon jungle. Sounds like several films
by the same name? You're right; this novel was their sourcebook. You've
seen the imitations; here's the original!
About Sir Arther Conan Doyle
(1859-1930)
Most readers know English writer Arthur Conan Doyle as the creator of
Sherlock Holmes, with his hawkish profile and rapier-quick mind. Many also
know that Doyle was a doctor before he was a writer, and thus in real life
more like Watson than Holmes. But fewer know that his 1902 knighthood
was conferred, not because he was the creator of the Great Detective,
but to acknowledge his outstanding medical work with the Langman field
hospital during the Bloemfontein, and a history of the Boer War in 1900,
and a pamphlet (a small monograph on the subject?) written in 1902,
defending the actions of the British army.
He also worked with the Congo Reform Association, and (like Holmes)
undertook inquiries into two notable miscarriages of justice. As
a historian, wrote, in addition to his numerous mystery stories,
a scholarly history of the Napoleonic Wars. Later in life he became
interested in spiritualism, and set aside most of his writing to follow
that new interest.
But it is for the incomparable Holmes that we now remember him. The
Sherlock Holmes stories have remained in print since they first appeared
in 1887. Several films and more than one television series have been
based on his exploits. And numerous of organizations still commemorate
this wholly fictional, but eternally fascinating character The
Baker Street Irregulars and The Neglected Patients of Doctor Watson,
to name but two.
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