N.S. Sherlockian’s invite to exclusive literary society is anything but elementary
HALIFAX — A Cape Breton University scholar is one of the latest inductees of an international literary society whose alumni include novelist Isaac Asimov, two former U.S. presidents and the actor who played Booger in Revenge of the Nerds.
Tom Ue, an assistant professor of the long nineteenth century at the Sydney, N.S. school, is one of the newest members of the Baker Street Irregulars. It’s an invite-only literary society named after the fictional detective’s home address, dedicated to the scholarship of Sherlock Holmes and the British author who brought him to life, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.
“It brings together Holmes readers from all walks of life,” Ue said in an interview. “So you’ve got lawyers, you’ve got artists, you’ve got some distinguished filmmakers, you’ve got so many different people who are part of this organization that celebrates Sherlock Holmes and Conan Doyle’s writing. And I think that makes it really special, the fact that we can come together from every part of the world to celebrate Holmes, and (John) Watson and Conan Doyle’s writings.”
Founded in 1934, the Irregulars boast that they are the oldest Sherlockian society in the world, publishing fresh scholarship on the violin-playing detective and hosting various events, including an extended weekend celebrating Holmes every January in New York.

