On Dr Watson's first adventure with Sherlock Holmes, the laconic consulting detective asks him:
"Have you any arms?"
"I have my old service revolver and a few cartridges."
"You had better clean it and load it..."
A few years later, in The Sign of Four Holmes asks him:
"Have you a pistol, Watson
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(I note I have two Dorothy L Sayers icons and no Agatha Christie icons. Should change that.)
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But I like the idea of the writer pondering whether the reply should be "my old trusty service revolver" or "oddly, I have an experimental model of this new 'machine gun' thingie, fires off 120 rounds a minute Holmes, it'd make mincemeat of Moriarty at five hundred yards. So should I bring that or the old service revolver that jams all the damn time?"
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Or possibly, it's playing on *more advanced* continuity, and there's an intervening story in which a blood-spattered Watson has sworn off weapons, decided to get back to his healing roots, and promised to toss his pistol into the Thames. So 'I have my service revolver' is a confession, delivered with foot-shuffling (or steely, reborn determination to give something both barrels. If it doesn't jam).
'Shall I fetch the steam-powered mecha battle-suit from the stables, Holmes?'
'No, Watson, we want the element of surprise...'
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And retrospectively shot the poor blighter in the leg! Having already had a crack at his shoulder. (Unless some kind of advanced therapy simply moved the injury - maybe it eventually gets massaged further down, off the end of his toes, and pains him no more.)
I'm trying to think of novels (possibly postmodern ones) in which characters are deliberately inconsistent, but can't.
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I'm trying to think of novels (possibly postmodern ones) in which characters are deliberately inconsistent, but can't.
The Adventure of the Unreliable Narrator?
I'm sure I've read detective fiction where this is part of the shtick. And plenty where the narrator changes, and troubles the previous account(s). Susan Howatch's Starbridge novels do this particularly well, I think. Oh, and then there's the gimmick where the concluding chapter totally undermines the preceding narrative in its entirety (I'm sure there ( ... )
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Somehow it seems very Sayersish that when she inadvertently repeats herself, it's while making a cultural and literary allusion.
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