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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ngasiecvr4x6sol084019_375x500.png]]
2 [[caption-width-right:350:Cover for the 2018 graphic novel adaptation from Creator/DarkHorseComics]]
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4"A Study in Emerald" is a UsefulNotes/HugoAward-winning short story by Creator/NeilGaiman, essentially an IntercontinuityCrossover between ''Literature/SherlockHolmes'' and the works of Creator/HPLovecraft. Originally it was published in ''Shadows Over Baker Street'' (2003), an entire anthology of Sherlock Holmes pastiches set in the backdrop of Lovecraft's Cthulhu Mythos. Later it was republished in Gaiman's anthology, ''Fragile Things'' (2006).
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6Written in the style of a classic Holmes pastiche, this story (roughly following the plot of the first Holmes novel ''Literature/AStudyInScarlet'') finds [[TheWatson a British soldier invalided home]] after being injured in a war in Afghanistan. Through a mutual acquaintance he becomes flatmates with a [[GreatDetective brilliant if unorthodox consulting detective]]. One day they are called by Inspector Lestrade to assist with investigating the gruesome murder of a member of the Royal Family. A member who is both far more and far less than human...
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8Can be read [[http://www.neilgaiman.com/mediafiles/exclusive/shortstories/emerald.pdf here]] for free, in nifty newsprint format in the style of an old Victorian Penny Dreadful. Which we highly recommend you do before proceeding to the trope list, which contains spoilers.
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10And also just because it's awesome.
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12A BoardGame was released in 2013 by Treefrog Games
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14Creator/DarkHorseComics released a graphic novel adaptation of the story on July 10, 2018, drawn by Rafael Albuquerque.
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16Gaiman later wrote another, slightly more grounded Holmes pastiche, ''Literature/TheCaseOfDeathAndHoney''.
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18-----
19!!This work provides examples of:
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21* AdaptationalAbomination: [[spoiler:Queen Victoria (and presumably most other aristocrats and world leaders) are {{Eldritch Abomination}}s and their descendants.]]
22* AdaptationalHeroism / AdaptationalVillainy: Subverted in an interesting way. [[spoiler:In this universe, Moriarty and Moran are the detectives while Holmes and Watson are the criminal masterminds, but the former are working (semi-unwittingly) for the cosmic horrors ruling the Earth while the latter are freedom fighters working to free humanity. So, despite all the changes, Holmes and Watson are still ultimately the heroes saving people from Moriarty and Moran.]]
23* AlienBlood: Hence why it's a study in ''emerald''.
24* AlienSpaceBats: It's revealed in the first few paragraphs that [[EldritchAbomination Eldritch Abominations]] exist and are accepted fact in this version of UsefulNotes/VictorianBritain, and that's just the beginning.
25* TheAllConcealingI: [[spoiler:The protagonists aren't referred to by name, so we're led to believe they're Holmes and Watson... until the real Holmes and Watson show up.]]
26* AllohistoricalAllusion: In addition to the references to the Sherlock Holmes and Lovecraft mythos, there are a few nods to actual history. [[spoiler: In particular, the ending hints at "recent events in Russia" that may lead to disaster, perhaps a reference to the assassination of Tsar Alexander II.]]
27* AntiHero: [[spoiler: Rache, the real Sherlock Holmes and killer of royalty,]] is a PragmaticHero.
28* AssholeVictim: The Bohemian prince turns out to be one. [[spoiler:According to Holmes, he was actually a SerialKiller and SerialRapist who abused his position to drive women insane and drain their lifeforce. Holmes and Watson lured him into their trap by claiming they had kidnapped a woman for him.]]
29* BadassBookworm: [[spoiler: Rache, the real Sherlock Holmes.]]
30* BadassNormal: [[spoiler: Holmes and Watson]] managed to kill a human/Old One hybrid with mundane weaponry.
31* BadMoonRising: The narrator mentions in passing that the moon is now red, and has been for centuries. People are used to it now.
32* BigGood: The Old Ones, in the eyes of most of humanity.
33* BreadEggsMilkSquick: Our protagonists go to see a theatre troupe perform three one-act plays: a wacky MistakenIdentity comedy, a tragic melodrama about a [[TooGoodForThisSinfulEarth sweet starving waif who sells violets]], and a [[CosmicHorrorStory historical epic about the day the Old Ones awoke and conquered humanity]]. And the audience is [[DeliberateValuesDissonance equally charmed by all three.]]
34%%* BrownNote
35* ContinuityNod:
36** The name Sherry Vernet is a nod to a minor line from the Holmes story "The Adventure of the Greek Interpreter."[[spoiler: In it, Holmes was said to be a distant relative of the painter Claude Vernet, and Sherringford was Holmes's first name in Arthur Conan Doyle's early drafts.]]
37** The [[spoiler: Sigerson]] alias was also used as such by [[spoiler: Holmes]] in the period between the events of "[[spoiler:''The Final Problem'']]" and "[[spoiler:''The Adventure Of The Empty House'']]".
38** "[[spoiler:John]] (or perhaps [[spoiler: James]]) [[spoiler: Watson]]" is a reference to Creator/ArthurConanDoyle's notorious failure to keep [[spoiler: Watson]]'s first name straight. Call it a miscontinuity nod.
39** Likewise, there's a similar nod to the text's disagreement about where on his body [[spoiler:Watson]] was injured in [[spoiler:Afghanistan]]. ''Literature/AStudyInScarlet'' placed it on his shoulder, later stories said his leg. In ''A Study In Emerald'' [[spoiler:Moran, i.e., the "fake" Watson, was wounded in his shoulder, while the real Watson was wounded in his leg]].
40*** [[spoiler: Moriarty refers to Watson as "The Limping Doctor" until Watson's name is revealed at the end.]]
41** [[spoiler: In Holmes' letter, he refers to the book "Dynamics of an Asteroid", which was a book written by Moriarty, mentioned in "The Valley of Fear."]]
42** The detective muses that when a doctor turns to crime, he always ranks among both the most brilliant and the most heinous of villains. In the original canon, Sherlock Holmes makes this observation about Dr. Roylott in "The Adventure of the Speckled Band". [[spoiler: In this universe, it's Dr. Watson.]]
43* CosmicHorrorStory: But of course.
44* CrackFic: And a glorious one it is.
45* CrazyInTheHeadCrazyInTheBed: [[PlayedForHorror Played for disturbing horror]]. A debauched German prince (the HumanoidAbomination spawn of a Lovecraftian cosmic entities and a human) is lured into a trap by [[spoiler:Literature/SherlockHolmes]] with the promise of raping a virgin driven to madness by his appearance.
46-->Having learned a little of his recreational predilections, I told him I had procured for him a girl, abducted from a convent in Cornwall where she had never seen a man, and that it would only take his touch, and the sight of his face, to tip her over into a perfect madness.
47-->Had she existed, he would have feasted on her madness while he took her, like a man sucking the flesh from a ripe peach leaving nothing behind but the skin and the pit. I have seen them do this. I have seen them do far worse.
48* DeadlyDoctor:
49-->Indeed. I hate to say this, but it is my experience that when a doctor goes to the bad, he is a fouler and darker creature than the worst cut-throat.
50** [[spoiler: Subverted, in that the average reader is quite likely to agree with the killer, Dr. Watson, that his actions were right and necessary.]]
51** This is also either a ContinuityNod or MythologyGag, in that the line is originally used to describe Dr. Roylott in "The Adventure of the Speckled Band'': "When a doctor does go wrong he is the first of criminals. He has nerve and he has knowledge."
52* DeliberateValuesDissonance:
53** Tentacled horrors running the place? [[VichyEarth The natural order of things.]] To do it otherwise would just be silly.
54** The narrator refers to the "savages" of Afghanistan (both human and EldritchAbomination) who are unwilling to see the reasonableness of being ruled by their betters in London -- or even Moscow!
55* DestroyTheEvidence: The narrator is advised to burn the note sent by the murderer, as it's dangerous subversion (he secretly keeps it however). Lestrade even approves this FieryCoverup, despite the note being evidence in a murder case.
56* DidWeJustHaveTeaWithCthulhu: Early in the story, the protagonists are briefed by the Queen who, while oddly voiced, speaks English and talks lucidly, and is nice enough to heal the narrator's injury. She seems decent enough if you ignore the strong implication (probably certainty) that she and her relatives like to MindRape people every once in a while and will probably wipe out humanity pretty soon.
57* DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu: Two men manage to knife to death a Bohemian prince, a sort of Old One half-breed. [[spoiler:Using surgical scalpels.]]
58* DidYouJustRomanceCthulhu: Victoria is not the same species as Prince Albert in this universe.
59* EldritchAbomination: The Great Ones, naturally, including Queen Victoria, the Black One of Egypt, the Ancient Goat and the Czar Unanswerable.
60* EvilReactionary: The detective eventually deduces that 'Rache' and his accomplice are "Restorationists", seditious [[BombThrowingAnarchists anarchists]] who want to drive away the Old Ones and restore mankind to its "old ways". Of course, the "Evil" part is only [[DeliberateValuesDissonance from the perspective]] of the protagonists and Lestrade; the reader might be inclined to see them in a different light.
61* ExpertConsultant: The detective of the story is a consulting detective, apparently the world's first and only. [[spoiler: Except, the detective is not Holmes, but Moriarty.]]
62* {{Expy}}: The Great Old Ones all have different names (or possibly titles). Ancient Goat, Parent to a Thousand is Lovecraft's Shub-Niggurath, MotherOfAThousandYoung. The Black One of Egypt is Nyarlathotep, the Czar Unanswerable is Hastur, and so on.
63* FaceFramedInShadow: We never get to see Prince Drago's face as it's always obscured by the shadow.
64** On the other hand, the detective had previously noted the location of the face as a distinguishing feature, so there is a chance that there isn't supposed to be anything there '''but''' shadow.
65* FictionalAccent: The narrator takes note of the human Prince Albert's distinct accent, pronouncing S sounds as Zs in imitation of the {{Eldritch Abomination}}s that [[VichyEarth rule over humanity]].
66* ForeignRulingClass: Europe's BlueBlood (well, [[AlienBlood Green]]) are the Lovecraftian monsters that overthrew Earth in centuries past, as well as their [[{{Cthulhumanoid}} hybrid descendants]].
67--> '''Narrator:''' She was called Victoria, because she had beaten us in battle, seven hundred years before, and she was called Gloriana, because she was glorious, and she was called the Queen, because the [[TheUnpronouncable human mouth was not shaped to say her true name]].
68* {{Foreshadowing}}: There are a lot of clues about [[spoiler: the two main characters being actually Moriarty and Moran]]:
69** At the outset of the story, following a bit of [[ContemplateOurNavels navel-gazing]] PurpleProse, the narrator apologizes to the reader and comments that he's not a literary man, a line which makes sense as a "bluff man of action's" HeroicSelfDeprecation, coupled with the fact that the audience understands that this is the first story written by Watson. [[spoiler: However, if one thinks about it, Watson is very much a literary man, since he's supposedly the author of all of Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories. Thus, in retrospect, this line is a signal that the narrator is not Watson, especially when coupled with the fact that in the story itself, the "real Watson" is the author of the play viewed by the protagonists.]]
70** When they meet for the first time and both mention some things the other might find annoying, [[spoiler:the violin not being mentioned can be a clue that the other man is not Holmes (although the violin was only mentioned since Watson had issues with strong noises, while here the narrator is the one screaming at night), and the narrator not mentioning a dog is a clue that he's not Watson.]].
71** The narrator remarks more than once how he used to be a good shot. [[spoiler: Watson wasn't bad, but wasn't that good. Moran, however, was known to be an expert marksman.]]
72** We also see the consulting detective acting much harsher and more judgmental than in canon appearances, while the narrator doesn't. [[spoiler: Another clue that the detective isn't Holmes, and the different attitude doesn't come merely from the darker atmosphere.]]
73** In the final letter, it's remarked how "Henry Camberley" was apparently a smoker, and yet had a brand-new pipe and no tobacco. [[spoiler: While the pipe wasn't ''that'' present in canon stories, Holmes did have one, and smoked from his first story. Moriarty, on the other hand, was never associated with smoking.]]
74** The most [[RefugeInAudacity outrageous]], however, is while talking with Sherry Vernet, when they go by the aliases of "Henry Camberley" and "Mister Sebastian". [[spoiler: The latter isn't a made-up name; the narrator’s name actually is Sebastian.]]
75** In the comic adaptation, there's a (in hindsight blatant) clue due to the medium: [[spoiler: The Detective doesn't even look like Sherlock Holmes, as the latter is described in the books as being black-haired, clean-shaven, and pale. The Detective's different look could be artistic licence, but then Vernet shows up matching the classic Holmes look.]]
76* GodSaveUsFromTheQueen: Queen Victoria. [[UsefulNotes/QueenVictoria Not that one.]] She's called [[MeaningfulName Victoria]] because [[CurbStompBattle she conquered Europe centuries ago]].
77* HalfHumanHybrid: Royalty is the product of intercourse between humans and Old Ones, producing something with green blood and a large number of limbs.
78* HeroAntagonist: [[spoiler:The killer is the real Sherlock Holmes.]]
79* HotSkittyOnWailordAction: Victoria's consort is quite human, while she towers over them.
80* InSpiteOfANail:
81** In the end, despite everything that's changed, [[spoiler: Holmes and Watson are still heroes battling Moriarty and Moran to save the day. The only real difference is that Moriarty and Moran think they're the good guys.]]
82** Despite the fact that in this reality, the Old Ones have been ruling humanity for centuries, humanity's scientific and technological progress hasn't changed in any way. Subverted if the Detective's throwaway comments on Vernet's views on the relationship between light and matter is interpreted as a sign that [[spoiler: Holmes is trying to develop nuclear weapons decades ahead of our scientists]].
83* TheJoyOfX: The short story uses the pattern '''A Study in X''' when X is usually a colour or a Sherlock Holmes pun.
84%%* LovecraftLite
85* MedicalMonarch: Queen Victoria is able to ease the narrator's constant pain from a wound he received from an EldritchAbomination in Afghanistan. Of course, she's probably ''related'' to it.
86* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast: All plays on the titles of Lovecraft characters. The Czar Unanswerable (The Unnameable), the Black One of Egypt (Nyarlathotep), The Ancient Goat, Parent to a Thousand, Emperor of All China (Shub'Niggurath).
87** They manage to turn The Queen Victoria Gloriana into this by what it means. "She was called Victoria, because she had beaten us in battle, seven hundred years before, and she was called Gloriana, because she was glorious, and she was called the Queen, because the human mouth was not shaped to pronounce her true name."
88* NobleTopEnforcer: Lestrade, the detective, the narrator and Prince Albert are all decent people by their society's standard.
89* NukeEm: Offhand comments in the letter from [[spoiler: Sherlock Holmes]] at the end indicate that he is working on the theory of relativity. Given that he's made killing {{Physical God}}s and {{Eldritch Abomination}}s his life's work, there's really only one reason why he would.
90* ObliviouslyEvil: The protagonists and Lestrade don't realize they are enablers to tyranny. They see it as the natural order of things.
91* PerspectiveFlip: Kind of. [[spoiler:Moriarty and Moran are the "good guys" and Holmes and Watson are the antagonists. However, while the reader probably ends up seeing the latter as still being heroic, Moriarty and Moran actually are well-intentioned in this setting despite their allegiance to Eldritch Abominations.]]
92* PetTheDog: The narrator's arm gets healed by Queen Victoria.
93* PublicDomainCanonWelding: This ''would'' be a fanfic if the components weren't PublicDomain...
94* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: Queen Victoria is this by the standard of the setting; she heals [[spoiler:Moran's arm without expecting anything in return, and thanks the pair for finding the prince's murderer even if said murderer is still on the loose]]. But by the reader's standards she is still an Old One who will probably wipe out humanity, and she also seems to have no issue with [[spoiler:the prince's hobby of raping, torturing and murdering young human women]].
95* RefugeInAudacity: The graphic novel adaptation [[spoiler: has Holmes and Watson casually walking in London while Lestrade and his men rush past them. Holmes gets bonus points for wearing his deerstalker and inverness cape.]]
96* ReligionOfEvil: The Old Ones effectively force humanity to worship them and are violently hateful of any religion not dedicated to them.
97* RightUnderTheirNoses: The letter at the end declares that the killer and his accomplice are going on the run, causing Inspector Lestrade and his men to start stopping all trains and boats leaving the country. The detective, for his part, suspects that the two are ''actually'' going to hide in a notorious crime-ridden slum -- the Rookery of St. Giles merely a mile away where the police don't dare go except by the dozen. Because, if the roles were reversed, [[ThatsWhatIWouldDo that's what he'd do]].
98* RoyallyScrewedUp: Played for kind of dark humor in that the Queen's relatives seem to be the usual debauched and reckless sort that the human Victoria had (and probably many/most monarchs have), but it's taken up to eleven, given what they are.
99* ScrewTheRulesImDoingWhatsRight: This is why [[spoiler: Holmes murdered the prince; this kind of tyranny they cannot abide]].
100* SerialNumbersFiledOff (InUniverse): The plays they see concerning the mistaken identity between identical twins and the girl who sells violets are, respectively, Shakespeare's ''Theatre/TheComedyOfErrors'' (with a bit of Wilde's ''Theatre/TheImportanceOfBeingEarnest'' mixed in) and ''The Little Match Girl'' by Hans Christian Andersen with a few details changed.
101* ShellShockedVeteran: The narrator mentions that he often has flashbacks to his military service in Afghanistan and that he frequently screams in his sleep. Given that his tour of duty ended with an encounter with an EldritchAbomination, it's not hard to figure out why.
102* SherlockScan: Mostly played straight with the Great Detective, but subverted/parodied in the scene where he recognizes that the murder victim is a member of the German royal family... by the number of his limbs and the green shade of his blood.
103** And in that case, while he's being snarky to Lestrade, he can recognize that the hybrid features are specifically from whatever eldritch horrors rule Germany.
104** When the protagonists go undercover to investigate their suspect, they find themselves [[SpotTheImposter on the receiving end]]. [[spoiler:Unsurprisingly as he's the TropeNamer.]]
105* ShoutOut: With the exception of the first one, which introduces a theater troupe that will feature in the plot, each of the advertisements between chapters.
106** "Victor's Vitae", manufactured by [[Literature/{{Frankenstein}} Victor von F.]], promises to restore life to the dead... [[TheLoinsSleepTonight nether regions]].
107** [[Literature/TheStrangeCaseOfDrJekyllAndMrHyde "Jekyll's Powders"]] will release the inner you.
108** Exsanguinations by [[{{Dracula}} V. Tepes]], for your health.
109** [[SpringHeeledJack Jack's Boots, Shoes, and Brogues]]. Putting the spring back in your heels is their specialty.
110* SpellMyNameWithABlank: The story is signed [[spoiler: S_______ M____ Major (Ret'd)]]. Plus, the narrator says he's from the "____th Regiment" of the army.
111* StaringDownCthulhu: The consulting detective doesn't seem at all intimidated when he meets Victoria.
112* ThatsWhatIWouldDo: The detective tells the narrator that he figured out how the murderers got away based on the fact that he would have done the same thing. [[spoiler: An early moment of foreshadowing that, in an AlternateUniverse, he is the villain.]]
113* TitleDrop: In the description of the crime scene.
114* TomatoSurprise: [[spoiler:The narrator is not Dr. Watson, and the Great Detective is not Sherlock Holmes. They are actually Moran and Moriarty.]]
115* TwiceToldTale: The ending can be hard to follow unless you're relatively familiar with the Literature/SherlockHolmes canon. (The story doesn't require a similarly close knowledge of the Cthulhu mythos, but it doesn't hurt.)
116* VillainWorld: A parody version. An alternate 19-century Earth ruled by the Great Old Ones; it is implied that all sorts of Victorian horrors and abominations coexist peacefully with humans: SpringHeeledJack owns a shoe store, Dr. Jekyll sells a medicine which allows to "release the inner you", etc.
117* TheWatson: Well, it's a Literature/SherlockHolmes pastiche, after all.
118* WeirdMoon: It's bright red thanks to the Old Ones.
119* WeWillMeetAgain: The narrator predicts that his friend has not given up his search for the murderer, even though he's no longer on the case, and it will eventually lead to a fatal confrontation between them.
120* WorthyOpponent: The Great Detective and his equally clever antagonist take this attitude toward each other.
121* WritingAroundTrademarks: The narrator refers to the detective as "my friend". This sort of thing was common in professionally published pastiches, as the legal status of the Holmes characters was turbulent. [[spoiler: It's actually because the narrator and his friend are NOT Watson and Holmes.]]
122* WrittenByTheWinners: If the play is any indication, the Old Ones make it clear they are the noble figures of history despite having conquered humanity.
123* YouDontLookLikeYou: In the comic, Albuquerque created unusual designs for the Baker Street duo. [[spoiler: It's a significant clue that this trope is being subverted, as Albuquerque actually uses much more faithful looks for the real Holmes and Watson; it's clear from the concept art that he put some thought into creating suitably ambiguous designs for Moriarty and Moran.]]
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