Sexton Blake: The Early Years
by Sexton Blake (Author), Colin Heston (Introduction)
Before Sexton Blake became Britain's most famous detective, he was many detectives.
Early Blake: The Pretenders returns to the formative years of the great detective's career, presenting a remarkable collection of rare stories from 1893–1905 that reveal how the character evolved through the hands of multiple pioneering writers. Long before the standardized Blake of later decades, these adventures show a hero who could be detective, adventurer, spy, scientist, actor, and globe-trotter—sometimes all within the same story.
From inheritance conspiracies and criminal secret societies to hypnotism, imposture, international manhunts, theatrical murders, and bizarre scientific mysteries, these tales capture the extraordinary imagination of turn-of-the-century popular fiction. Readers will follow Sexton Blake across London, India, South America, the Mediterranean, and beyond as he unmasks killers, exposes frauds, rescues kidnapped heirs, and defeats some of the era's most ingenious villains.
Included are classic early adventures by William Shaw Rae, Hal Meredith, Arnold Grahame, F. H. Evans, and other influential contributors whose distinctive voices helped shape the detective's legend. These stories showcase the full range of the early Blake phenomenon: Gothic mystery, high adventure, melodrama, proto-thriller, scientific romance, and traditional detective fiction.
More than a collection of exciting mysteries, Early Blake: The Pretenders is a window into the creation of one of popular literature's greatest fictional institutions. The volume demonstrates how Sexton Blake's extraordinary versatility emerged through collaboration, experimentation, and the fertile imagination of numerous authors writing under a shared character.
For readers of Sherlock Holmes, Victorian and Edwardian detective fiction, pulp adventures, and literary history, this collection offers both thrilling entertainment and an important chapter in the development of modern popular fiction.
Note on the "Blake Pretenders"
The title The Pretenders operates on two levels.
Within the stories, Blake repeatedly confronts pretenders to wealth, titles, inheritances, identities, and social position. Impostors, masqueraders, false heirs, criminal doubles, and master deceivers drive many of the plots, making questions of identity central to the early Sexton Blake canon.
But there is a second meaning. The real "Blake pretenders" were the many authors who, over the years, stepped into the role of creating Sexton Blake himself. Unlike Sherlock Holmes, who remained associated with a single creator, Sexton Blake became a collaborative literary phenomenon. Each writer brought a different vision of the detective—more adventurous, more scientific, more theatrical, more mysterious, or more action-oriented. Rather than diminishing the character, these successive "pretenders" transformed Blake into one of the most adaptable heroes in popular fiction.
This volume celebrates those early contributors and reveals how their diverse interpretations combined to create the enduring legend of Sexton Blake.
Read-Me.Org Inc. New York-Philadelphia-Australia. 2026. 327p.