I really love the John Murray editions of Arthur Conan Doyle stories, especially the Sherlock Holmes editions. Of course, I don't own any super-special or rare editions (first editions etc) but the great news is that because of their popularity, there are plenty left. I particularly like to buy books with their dustjackets - usually the editions I can buy aren't elite, so the dustjackets are rarely in brilliant condition, but the important point is that they are together and pretty.
Here are some examples of John Murray editions in dust jackets (or dust wrappers if you prefer) that I think are pretty (which is how I choose what I want to buy):
For some reason, I hadn't been aware of these three books shown below, aimed at younger readers:
It's possible I didn't notice them because I always look for books with dust-jackets. These books appear to be aimed at school-age readers, and were first published by John Murray in 1950 in a series of three:
- The First Book of Sherlock Holmes Stories
- The Second Book of Sherlock Holmes Stories
- The Third Book of Sherlock Holmes Stories
- Silver Blaze
- The Stockbroker's Clerk
- The Final Problem
- The Empty House
- The Red-Headed League
- The Dying Detective
- The Man with the Twisted Lip
- The Dancing Men
- His Last Bow
The stories are nicely arranged to capture the major milestones of Sherlock, with the first ending with the Final Problem, the second starting with Empty House, and the third closing with His Last Bow. None of the stories contain inferences to social (i.e., sexual) scandal are present, such as Scandal in Bohemia, Charles Augustus Milverton, or the Illustrious Client.
There are some other elements that the book contains that make the book useful as an educational tool.
All three books contain an identical introduction by H. M. King, B.A., Ph.D., Headmaster, Regent's Park Secondary School for Boys, Southampton. The school itself as a boys school appears to have ceased operating in that capacity around 1967, and the campus is now a Community College.