
The Quotable Holmes Courtesy of American Digest @ www.americandigest.org
Gerard Van der Leun 9
was left alone with only the fading coals of his memory to warm
him.
Now, it was evident that all in this manuscript had been said
before and that my great-grandfather was merely taking, if you will,
a victory lap through his work before the fall of night, but it was
and remains a genuine John H. Watson manuscript and, as a
Watson -- the last of that name and the line -- my duty to see it to
publication was clear. But how?
Having been a recluse for many years here in the Canadian
outback with only my Corgis to sustain and comfort me, I was
unfamiliar with the labyrinthine ways of modern publishing and
ignorant of how to obtain a relationship with a firm that would
bring these last notes of my illustrious ancestor to an admiring
public. Indeed, the task daunted me for many months until, one
dark and stormy night, I lay awake perusing the latest issue of the
monthly newsletter “The Corgi Companion” and noted an
exceptionally concise and pithy article on the difficulties of getting a
publisher for the essential “Corgi Bloodlines” -- a volume of Corgi
genealogy that is the bible of breeders such as myself. The author of
this article related, in riveting detail, his search for a publisher that
would undertake this mammoth project in the face of an indifferent
world. That he had, through determination and sheer grit,
succeeded in this seemingly impossible quest awoke in me only
blind admiration. Suffice it to say that the post took my tale and my
quandary to him the very next day.
As fate would have it, Mr. Gerard Van der Leun, was not
only a devoted Corgi breeder such as myself, but highly conversant
with the work of my late great-grandfather. After an extended
exchange of letters on the subjects at hand, he elected to become
my champion and put his shoulder to the wheel. And while the task