.Doyle really intended Holmes to be gone forever...and yet, to a modern reader, EVERYTHING about the circumstances REEKS of "faked death":
- no body
- a very good reason for not trying harder to find the body
- the narrator / hero / one that we trust does not actually SEE the death
- the reason Watson isn't there to witness the confrontation is a little flimsy in that, it's hard to believe Watson was so easily persuaded to abandon Holmes
Whereas Moffit and Gattis clearly intended from the first that Sherlock wouldn't be dead...yet they changed the circumstances and manner of death considerably into a form of death that's much HARDER to fake. Why not have Sherlock jump into a body of water? Is it the fact that no body = not really dead is a popular idea, so you would expect John and others in-universe to guess that he wasn't dead if there was no body?
Last edited by SherlocklivesinOH (January 17, 2014 4:59 pm)