Mary Russell's War Page 8
The Mary Russell Companion: with many details about Sussex, Mary Russell, Sherlock Holmes, and all the rest.
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More about Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes can be found on the Laurie R. King web site, www.LaurieRKing.com. Laurie also keeps an active author page on Facebook.
Addendum II: attributions
Newspaper quotes are taken verbatim from The San Francisco Chronicle and The Times of London. The erratic spelling of newspapers, noted by Miss Russell herself, is preserved in her excerpts: Nurnberg is elsewhere Nuernberg, Leipzig appears as Leipsic, Alcatraz ends in an –s, Asilomar is given as Asilmar, etc.
Photographs used without attribution are my own, or were scanned from original newspapers, magazines, and postcards in my possession. Other images include:
August 4: Front page courtesy of San Francisco Chronicle/Polaris; Irene Adler, “A Scandal in Bohemia” by Arthur Conan Doyle. 11: Library of Congress; Library of Congress. 18: Uncle Sam by James Montgomery Flagg courtesy of Wikimedia; map from San Francisco and Oakland, a Visitor’s Guide by Rand McNally, 1923. 25: Leipzig courtesy of Wikipedia; Raffles, the Amateur Cracksman, courtesy of Wikipedia; Kroonland in Panama Canal, 1915, courtesy of Wikipedia
September 1: Plane over Paris courtesy of Wikipedia; Rudyard Kipling courtesy Wikipedia. 8: Pilot dropping bomb courtesy of Wikimedia; German cruiser Nurnburg in the SF Bay courtesy of Wikipedia. 15: The Valley of Fear cover courtesy of Wikipedia; Toy vendor, Chinatown, San Francisco (circa 1900) courtesy of Library of Congress. 22: Will You Stand for This courtesy of the Imperial War Museum. 29: Kitchener poster courtesy of Wikipedia; submarine fleet courtesy of Photos of the Great War.
October 27: Submarine fleet courtesy Photos of the Great War
November 17: Sunday Magazine courtesy of Wikipedia. 24: Holmes inspecting a moat from The Valley of Fear, by Arthur Conan Coyle
December 1: Grant Ave & Market courtesy of Wikipedia. 8: Cambrai trench courtesy of Wikipedia.
22: Holmes with candlestick from The Valley of Fear by Arthur Conan Coyle.
January 5: wheeled stretchers courtesy of Photos of the Great War.
February 2: British Army Victoria Station courtesy Imperial War Museum; submarine surfacing from Photos of the Great War; artillery barrage courtesy of Wikipedia. 9: Land girl courtesy of Imperial War Museum. 16: Sky lanterns courtesy of Wikipedia. 23: Queen Mary courtesy of Wikipedia; Army cycle poster courtesy Wikipedia.
March 2: Ship explosion courtesy of Wikipedia. 9: National Doughnut Day courtesy of Wikipedia. 16: Vickers gun courtesy of Wikipedia; trenches courtesy of Photos of the Great War; women ambulance drivers courtesy of Photos of the Great War. 30: women tram drivers courtesy of Wikipedia; The Toll of War courtesy of Library of Congress.
April 6: Women’s Land Army courtesy of Wikipedia.
Photos of the Great War: www.gwpda.org.photos
Library of Congress War of the Nations: www.flickr.com/photos/library_of_congress
End notes
[1] “My Story” and “A Case in Correspondence”.
[2] See Addendum I.
[3] This may be the document given in Locked Rooms.
[4] Russell’s Uncle Jake, her father’s younger brother, appears in the story “Mary’s Christmas.”
[5] Events of three years previous are given in “Mary’s Christmas”.
[6] Long excerpts from The Beekeeper’s Apprentice and other Russell memoirs are at www.laurierking.com/books. For the momentous meeting from Sherlock Holmes’ point of view, see “Beekeeping for Beginners” at www.laurierking.com/ebooks.