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The Land of Mist, the third Professor Challenger novel, transforms Doyle's scientific romance into a spiritualist inquiry. Serialized in the Strand (1925) and published in 1926, it follows reporter Edward Malone and Enid Challenger through séances, public disputations, and cautious tests that sift testimony from fraud. Dialogic chapters and case-study vignettes replace jungle exploits; Challenger's embattled rationalism collides with claims of survival after death. Set amid the interwar crisis of belief and the vogue for psychical research, the book blends melodrama with reportage to probe the limits of materialist science. Doyle, physician-turned-novelist and outspoken advocate of Spiritualism, writes from conviction shaped by wartime bereavements and years engaging psychical research. Companion tracts The New Revelation and The Vital Message announce the same aim: to defend survival after death while conceding the reality of imposture and the need for disciplined inquiry. Readers of speculative fiction, intellectual history, or religion-and-science debates will find The Land of Mist rewarding. As a sequel to The Lost World and a cultural artifact of the 1920s, it marries argument to narrative vigor; approach it as a serious historical brief in fictional form.
Quickie Classics summarizes timeless works with precision, preserving the author's voice and keeping the prose clear, fast, and readable-distilled, never diluted. Enriched Edition extras: Introduction · Synopsis · Historical Context · Author Biography · Brief Analysis · 4 Reflection Q&As · Editorial Footnotes.
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Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1859-1930) was a British writer best known for his creation of the iconic detective Sherlock Holmes. Doyle was a prolific author whose literary career spanned genres including mystery, fantasy, science fiction, and historical novels. Born in Edinburgh, Scotland, he pursued a medical degree at the University of Edinburgh, where he began his writing career. The Sherlock Holmes stories, beginning with 'A Study in Scarlet' in 1887, quickly catapulted Doyle to fame. Outside his detective fiction, Doyle's work often reflected his own interests in spiritualism and the paranormal. A notable example is 'The Land of Mist' (1926), which features the character Professor Challenger and addresses themes of spiritualism, a topic Doyle openly supported after the deaths of his son and brother. His literary output exemplified a blend of keen observation, deductive reasoning, and an interest in the otherworldly. Doyle's works even expanded beyond fiction, with contributions to military literature and historical texts. Despite his varied bibliography, it is his masterful creation of Sherlock Holmes, capturing the Victorian and Edwardian period's fascination with rationality juxtaposed against the unknown, that has indelibly marked Conan Doyle as a seminal figure in the annals of English literature.
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