Sherlock Holmes and the Mystery of Einstein's Daughter

Sherlock Holmes and the Mystery of Einstein's Daughter

by Tim Symonds
Sherlock Holmes and the Mystery of Einstein's Daughter

Sherlock Holmes and the Mystery of Einstein's Daughter

by Tim Symonds

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Overview

The Dean of a Swiss university persuades Sherlock Holmes to investigate the background of a would-be lecturer. To Dr. Watson it seems a very humdrum commission - but who is the mysterious 'Lieserl'? How does her existence threaten the ambitions of the technical assistant level III in Room 86 at the Federal Patents Office in Berne by the name of Albert Einstein? The assignment plunges Holmes and Watson into unfathomable Serbia to solve one of the intractable mysteries of the 20th Century. In Tim Symonds' previous detective novels, Sherlock Holmes and the Dead Boer At Scotney Castle and Sherlock Holmes And The Case Of The Bulgarian Codex the author based pivotal historic facts and a principal character on real life. So too in this new mystery.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781780925721
Publisher: MX Publishing
Publication date: 01/13/2014
Pages: 208
Sales rank: 782,851
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.44(d)

About the Author

Tim Symonds is the author of the best-selling novels Sherlock Holmes and The Dead Boer at Scotney Castle and Sherlock Holmes And The Case Of The Bulgarian Codex.

What People are Saying About This

Tim Symonds

“Thank you so much for sharing your latest Sherlock caper with me. A wonderful, page-flipping read. You've caught the Conan Doyle ambience and cadences beautifully. How did you ever manage to have Holmes and Watson riding in a tarantass - a priceless touch? At times, I was sure I was back again in the old master of Baker Street's literary hands. I don't agree with your assessment of Mileva's contribution to relativity - methinks it was slight. And, of course, there is no evidence of the dastardly deed (if in fact there was one). But a homicide, even if justified, is a neat, and maybe a necessary, prop for your Holmesian whodunit. So, misgivings aside, hooray to you for bringing back the great Sherlock and his faithful sidekick Watson. And, not incidentally, for taking me back to those exciting, youthful Saturday afternoons in the movie house watching Messrs Rathbone and Bruce, Hollywood's best Holmes and Watson, at work. For this old geezer, that was an anti-aging pill, for sure. Keep up the splendid work.” --Tim Symonds

Foreword

Foreword From Sherlock Holmes and The Mystery of Einstein's Daughter

Albert Einstein was born in Ulm and grew up in Munich, bustling, wealthy towns in the Swabian region of southern Germany. At the age of five he was shown how a compass needle always swings to magnetic North. From that moment he determined to become a great physicist, more famous than Isaac Newton.

Eidgenoessische Technische Hochschule (ETH) Zurich, ca. 1905

Even today it is not widely known that at the age of twenty-three Einstein sired an illegitimate daughter with Mileva Maric, a physics student he met at the Zurich Polytechnikum, later his first wife. Mileva's father Milo? had risen from the peasantry through the Army and the Austria-Hungarian civil service to a position of influence throughout the Vojvodina region of Serbia.

Mileva and Albert referred to the infant daughter by the Swabian diminutive 'Lieserl' — Little Liese. Her life was fleeting. At around 21 months of age she disappeared from the face of the Earth. The real Lieserl may never have come to the eyes of the outside world but for an unexpected find eighty three years after her disappearance. In California Einstein's first son Hans Albert Einstein investigated an old shoebox tucked away on the top shelf of a wardrobe. It contained several dozen yellowed letters in German type, an exchange between Albert and Mileva. Italian, Swiss, German and Austro-Hungarian postmarks reflected their peripatetic life. Several letters dated between early 1901 and 1903 mention Lieserl. After September 1903 her name never appears again. Anywhere.

Lieserl's fate remains a subject of mystery and speculation. Researchers regularly trek to Serbia to conduct investigations. They comb through registries, synagogues, church and monastery archives throughout the Vojvodina region, the place of her birth and short life. To no avail.

Three hapless 'must have' theories hold sway. Lieserl must have died in an outbreak of scarlet fever in Novi-Sad in the late summer of 1903. She must have been adopted by family friends in Belgrade. She must have been placed in a home for children with special needs.

In The Mystery of Einstein's Daughter, Holmes and Watson are led to a dramatic Fourth Theory.

While works of fiction, the principal characters in Sherlock Holmes and the Dead Boer at Scotney Castle and Sherlock Holmes and The Case of The Bulgarian Codex are taken from real life. So too in Sherlock Holmes and the Mystery of Einstein's Daughter.

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