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The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes
by Arthur Conan Doyle
Category: Biography
Status: Available
Source: Public Domain โ Project Gutenberg
About This Book
About the Author
Scottish ยท 1859โ1930
He created Sherlock Holmes, the world's most famous fictional detective. Holmes has appeared in stories, films, and TV shows for over 100 years.
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About This Edition
This edition of The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes is sourced from Project Gutenberg, the world's oldest digital library of public domain literature, founded in 1971 by Michael Hart. Project Gutenberg houses over 70,000 freely available e-books whose copyrights have expired in the United States, and every text has been verified to be free of copyright restrictions.
On Libreya, the text has been carefully formatted for comfortable reading on any screen โ with consistent chapter navigation, adjustable font sizes, and four reading themes: light, sepia, dark, and night mode. Your reading position is saved automatically when you sign in, so you can pick up exactly where you left off across any device. The original text has not been altered in any way; what you read here is the same work as it appeared in its original published form.
About Classic Biography
Biography is one of the oldest and most direct forms of literature โ the attempt to render a human life with honesty, precision, and narrative shape. The great biographies and autobiographies of the literary tradition offer something that no other form can: direct access to the interior experience of people who shaped history, science, art, and thought. Autobiographical works like Benjamin Franklin's Autobiography, the Confessions of Jean-Jacques Rousseau, or Frederick Douglass's Narrative of the Life offer not just facts but the texture of a lived experience โ how the world looked from inside a particular consciousness at a particular moment in history. Classic biographical writing also includes portraits of great figures by those who knew them well, and these accounts carry an immediacy and particularity that later histories often lack. Reading biography is to practice a form of empathy at scale: to inhabit, however temporarily, a life very different from one's own, and to understand from the inside what it meant to live, think, and act in another time and place.

