I've got all three volumes of the Annotated SH (the two-volume set of the short stories, plus the one volume of the novels)--got them for Christmas last year (thank you, Mom and Sis). Cool thing is that, if you line them all up on the bookshelf, the books' spines form the silhouette of Holmes with his pipe and deerstalker hat.
'Safe'
Procedurals 1: Anything You Say Can and Will Be Used Against You.
This thread is for procedural TV, shows where the primary idea is to figure out the case. [NAFDA]
I too have a Mom and a Sis to thank for my Annotated Sherlock Holmes.
And mine didn't even coordinate their gifts. I'd had all three volumes on my Amazon wish list for years with no result, so last December, I sent out reminders of said list to my family and stressed that I'd really like those books. Mom sent me to the two-volume set and Sis sent the third, with neither of them knowing what the other was giving me.
What channel was Sherlock on? I can't find it in my listings.
PBS, Masterpiece Mystery, whenever it airs for you. It's also online, I think, on pbs.org.
Cool, thanks.
I had no trouble telling Graves and Freeman apart as Lestrade and Watson, but I am a big fan of both actors.
Castle - why do I have an unfortunate feeling who the secret admirer is?
On a lighter note - loved "Just for that, I'm basing my next book on Esposito." Bwahahahahahahahaha!!!!
There's a ton of great canon references throughout the Sherlock series.
Also, for my money, the first episode is the best. I can say that, just having watched it on the plane.
I rewatched the first episode, and liked it much better this time. And, god help me, I ship it. They're like puppies with each other and wrestling over the rawhide bone that is the case.