A female person
named Sarah Masters has made the Sherlockian wires buzz by adding gay romance
scenes into Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s text of A Study in Scarlet. Never mind that instead of writing her own
novel and doing all the work, she flat-out plagiarized Doyle’s work to create
her own. (Does giving him credit make it better? Ask yourself this: would any
living author tolerate such literary vandalism?) Never mind that I have no problem
with male homosexuality, even if it is Holmes and Watson. (Done well. We have
too much of them done badly, all over the place.) But here’s the thing:
I’m a feminist. Been
one since I was thirteen. Never a doubt that women shouldn’t have entirely the same
rights as men, even when my Sherlockian elders claimed our hobby should remain
otherwise at its upper levels. But part in parcel of that belief is the
opposite view: Men should have entirely the same rights as women.
So if Holmes and
Watson are going to be gay, which has happened before, I would like to submit
something that I don’t remember happening before: Irene Adler in a big ol’ pile
of naked ladies. Take it away, Dr. Watson!
To Sherlock Holmes
she is always the woman. I have seldom heard him mention her under any other
name. In his eyes she eclipses and predominates the whole of her sex. And that
fact was never as plain to me as that morning I arrived to visit my friend in
the old Baker Street rooms and found Miss Adler swimming in a enormous pile of
naked ladies.
Holmes sat in his
familiar wicker chair, fingers steepled in concentrated thought. “Come, Watson!
No finer opportunity to test your skills of observation shall present itself
than this. Make your way around the edge of this writhing mass of feminine
pulchritude and make yourself comfortable. We may be here a while!”
As was my habit, I
followed his directions silently and swiftly. My senses seemed to sharpen to
the level of Holmes’s own in an instant. My dainty blonde fiancĂ©e, Miss Mary
Morstan, was the first to catch my eye, even though her face and attentions
were neither one pointing in my direction. Former clients, Mary Sutherland,
working close in her near-sightedness, and Violent Hunter, showing far more
freckles than on previous occasions, were intertwined with Mary and limbs which
I believe belonged to Mrs. Neville St. Clair, Kitty Winter, and Beryl
Stapleton. The Stoner twins, Helen and the pale vampire Julia, combined to form
a human throne for Miss Adler, as Mrs. Hudson and Mrs. Turner tended to the
adventuress’s every request. A group of musicians called Massive Attack were
playing a tune which I recognized as “Paradise Circus.”
Need I have Watson go further? And in less family-friendly detail?
Being males, it might seem that Holmes, Watson, and I were objectifying the
ladies of the Canon for our own amusement. (Yes, I’ll admit it . . . the
musical selection in the last line was mine and not Watsons.) But I assure you,
all of the ladies involved in the passage above had very deep feelings for each
other, as unwritten in earlier chapters, just as Ms. Masters surely gave to
Holmes and Watson in her work. Is there really any difference?
I’ll leave the results of the experiment above to you. And if any of you
boys out there want to take the ball and run with it, just to balance out Sarah
Masters a little more substantially, go for it!
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