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Watson & Holmes

Created by Karl Bollers and Rick Leonardi

“No time for explanation, the game’s afoot!”

Ever wonder what would have happened if  Sherlock Holmes had been an inner city black dude?

Me neither.

But comic book scribe Karl Bollers did just that, and it was a pretty fun spin on The Great One. His HOLMES is a local P.I., complete with dreadlocks, a scarf and a jaunty fedora, working the streets of Harlem, and DR. JOHN WATSON is an Afghanistan war vet who looks like Shaft’s (very) big brother, toiling away in an inner-city clinic. They meet cute in the ER, and team up to find a missing girl. But the original Holmes and Watson never had to deal with the soul-numbing realities of 21st century inner city life: drugs, guns, gangs, corrupt cops, internet thrill killers and dumpster babies.

Oh, and Holmes doesn’t like anyone–not even his brother Mycroft–calling him “Sherlock.”

The series only ran from 2012-13, although neither creators Karl Bollers and artist Rick Leonardi had anything to do with it after the the original five-part story arc, “A Study in Black.” The series was taken over by Brandon Easton and artist N. Steven Harris for the sixth and final issue. The series wasn’t quite dead, though—that sixth issue, plus three new stories, were rounded up to fill out a second collection that Publishers Weekly deemed “as uneven as it is ambitious.”

But maybe I spoke too soon.

In 2024, a new collection , Watson & Holmes: A Scandal In Harlem, is scheduled to be released,comprising five tales from the finest African American talents in the industry: Brandon Easton, N.Steven Harris, Hannibal Tabu, Greg A. Elysée and… Karl Bollers, as part of the Noir Is The New Black series by black comic creators.

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Respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith.

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