tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2956288600403860320.post1307633963151612971..comments2023-12-26T12:18:55.616+00:00Comments on Doyleockian: Who are the readership?Alistair Duncanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16199962410016780822noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2956288600403860320.post-30022363624436814102014-06-17T08:45:54.509+01:002014-06-17T08:45:54.509+01:00That's true but I was asking for focused sites...That's true but I was asking for focused sites. Literary ones could still get recommended. What I was keen to avoid was those that had gone off into areas connected only by cast members.<br /><br />It appears to have been true in Gillette's day based on a New York Time article I uncovered yesterday but that's going into my latest book so I'll not go on about it here :-)Alistair Duncanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16199962410016780822noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2956288600403860320.post-67028202926552231172014-06-17T00:48:14.449+01:002014-06-17T00:48:14.449+01:00It does seem sad that the literary character Sherl...It does seem sad that the literary character Sherlock Holmes and his creator AC Doyle are pretty far down on the list of things that interest fans of certain thespians and their popular roles in this, the "New Sherlock Holmes Boom". Perhaps it was so in Gillette's and Rathbone and Brett's day. Your call for Sherlock Holmes websites elicited listings of BBC Sherlock-related fare. There is a certain amount of fun to be found in the tangential but I'm interested in the real deal. James C. O'Learyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13866010043246236340noreply@blogger.com