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Just before a wealthy businessman disappears, his wife sees his face in an upper floor window above an opium den. The only suspect is a beggar who lives in the room. Holmes has to stay up all night smoking his pipe before he finds the answer to the mystery.
This book is a graded reader. The story has been retold in modern English for students of English as a foreign / second language at intermediate level (CEFR B1) and younger native speakers.
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Graded readers help language learners improve their skills through reading for pleasure. They use grammar and vocabulary that are appropriate for learners at different levels.
Graded readers can help learners to
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remember key vocabulary;
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improve their understanding of grammar;
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remember common phrases and expressions; and
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enjoy great stories that would be too difficult to read in the original.
This graded reader is suitable for non-native learners of English at intermediate level (CEFR B1) and younger native speakers (US 6th grade). Stories at this level keep close to the original but are retold in modern English using high-frequency words. Less common words, place names, and points of cultural and historical interest are explained in the endnotes.
Features
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Comprehension and vocabulary tasks
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Summary of the story
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Endnotes for difficult words, place names and cultural references
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Word list at the end of the book
The Man with the Twisted Lip
Just before a wealthy businessman disappears, his wife sees his face in an upper floor window, above an opium den. The only suspect is a beggar who lives in the room.
Holmes smokes his pipe all night before finding the answer to the mystery.
Sherlock Holmes
Sherlock Holmes is a fictional private detective created by the British author and former doctor Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1859 - 1930). He lives in a flat in Baker Street, London with his friend Dr Watson. He works because he enjoys solving mysteries, rather than for money, and only investigates cases that he thinks are interesting. He is best known for his powers of logical reasoning, his ability to use disguises, and his forensic skills (he is the author of a book on different types of cigar ash). Conan Doyle once explained that Holmes was based on real doctors he had known when he was a medical student in the late 1870s.
Holmes is interesting because his personality has many contradictions. He is methodical in his work but untidy in his private life: he keeps his tobacco in the end of a slipper and rarely answers his letters. He is a man of science but also a heavy smoker. He is hard working when he is on a case, but when he has nothing to do, he is bored and lazy. He is an expert in certain fields related to his detective work, but completely ignorant about many other things. He once claimed that he didn’t know the Earth revolved around the Sun because it wasn’t relevant to his work. His interests are mostly intellectual, but he also plays the violin and is an expert at boxing and sword fighting.
Holmes is a loner and has no time for family, social life or romantic relationships. The only woman he admires is Irene Adler, and that is because she manages to outwit him;however, he is always charming to his female clients. As a person, he often seems unemotional and cold, ‘a thinking machine’, but he gets excited when he is in the middle of an investigation and he likes to show off his skills. He is particularly happy when he can solve a case that has defeated everybody else.
Doctor Watson
Most of the stories, including this one, are told by his friend Dr John Watson. Watson is an army doctor who was wounded in Afghanistan and sent back to England to recover. He meets Holmes when he is looking for a place to live and they agree to share a flat at 221B Baker Street. They become friends, and Watson eventually becomes an unofficial assistant to Holmes and writes up his cases. Watson later marries and moves out of Baker Street, but he stays in touch with Holmes (see A Scandal in Bohemia) and later, after his wife dies, he returns to share the Baker Street flat once again.
It was late one evening in June 1889. I was just about to go to bed when the doorbell rang. I sat up in my chair, and my wife put down her book.
‘A patient! You'll have to go out’, she said, looking disappointed.
‘Oh no,’ I said. I’d only been home a short time and I’d had a tiring day.
We heard the door open and then quick footsteps on the stairs. Our door opened and a lady dressed in black entered the room.
‘Why Kate, hello!’ said my wife in surprise. It was our friend Kate Witney.
‘I’m so sorry to disturb you so late,’ she said, and then suddenly she ran forward, put her arms around my wife, and started to cry on her shoulder. ‘I really need your help,’ she cried.
‘You poor thing! What on earth is the matter? Let me give you some wine and water and then sit down and tell us all about it. Would you like me to send James to bed?’