Sherlock Holmes Book Nook revealed!

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LEGO has today announced a new kind of set with the Sherlock Holmes Book Nook, used to decorate bookshelves. The press release follows:

10351 Sherlock Holmes: Book Nook
Rated 18+, 1,359 pieces
$129.99 / £109.99 / €119.99
Available at LEGO.com from 1st June

Recreate the mystique of Victorian London with the LEGO Icons Sherlock Holmes: Book Nook (10351) bookshelf decor kit. This set is perfect for fans of classic detective novels, serving as a unique book nook or as a captivating display model with iconic characters, including the astute Sherlock Holmes, his loyal companion Dr Watson, the enigmatic Irene Adler, the cunning Professor Moriarty and Baker Street newcomer, Paige.

Slide the book nook between your favourite novels to create a window into the adventures awaiting on Baker Street. Open it to discover a bookshop with a revolving display window, a shadowy terraced residence with a sliding front door, mysteries and clues, and a detailed recreation of Sherlock Holmes’ 221B apartment complete with a cosy fireplace, clue board and his beloved violin.


What do you think of the Sherlock Holmes Book Nook and the book nook concept for sets? Let us know in the comments.

Will you be buying this set?

Yes, as soon as it's released
Yes, eventually
Yes, if it's discounted
Maybe, I haven't made up my mind yet
No, it doesn't interest me
No, it's too expensive
No, it's too big
No, but I like it

153 comments on this article

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By in United States,

Wait I really like this...
Lego saw a problem and came to fix it.
Like anyone reads books anymore

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By in France,

Instabuy.

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By in Netherlands,

I think it would look good besides Diagon Alley 75978.

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By in Latvia,

Is it just me or the faces of these minifigures look... nostalgic...?

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By in United Kingdom,

@Your_Future_President said:
"Wait I really like this...
Lego saw a problem and came to fix it.
Like anyone reads books anymore "


hey books are awesome bud
i don't want you to be my future president if youve got opinions like that ;P
But I do think its awesome too

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By in United Kingdom,

Ooo, very nice-looking build this - not sure I'm 100% sold on the way number 222 splits in half at the back when folded up (think it would've looked nicer as two separate buildings instead) but at the same time it's so hidden behind the main focus buildings it's not too big of a deal overall. Pretty damn good!

(talking of deals, very interesting that it's specifically signed off by The Conan Doyle Estate too - was fully expecting for em to just use the Holmes books currently in the public domain, but I guess not!)

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By in United States,

This is such a great idea! If they do one for a book I really like I'd absolutely get it.

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By in Austria,

Would love to see a Book theme. Either fold-out like the Harry Potter, nooks like this, or bookends for something like LOTR where there aren't a lot of streets to recreate, but you could easily make Bag End/Hobbiton and Minas Tirith. For something like LOTR, you could even make it a special type to hold your fancy editions, and with Technic pieces it could slide open to fit whatever version you have.

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By in United States,

Irene's dress would actually be perfect for my Wolfpack queen

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By in United States,

and the race to turn this into a full modular on Rebrickable begins...

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By in Slovenia,

Rumoured price was 119… seems like they increased both the US and EU price

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By in Norway,

Would have been nice if there was a narrow middle panel to fill out the far end of the street when its closed up.

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By in United Kingdom,

@dimc said:
"Would love to see a Book theme. Either fold-out like the Harry Potter, nooks like this, or bookends for something like LOTR where there aren't a lot of streets to recreate, but you could easily make Bag End/Hobbiton and Minas Tirith. For something like LOTR, you could even make it a special type to hold your fancy editions, and with Technic pieces it could slide open to fit whatever version you have. "

Well youre in luck buddy- there's going to be a Gandalf vs Durin's Bane booknook later this year- and probably a HP one too

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By in United States,

I have very strong feelings about this, but I’m not yet sure what they are. (In deference to @StyleCounselor)

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By in United Kingdom,

I'm a bit uncomfortable with it just being a facade, but at least we get a nice stretch of street and it looks decent folded up. And I've actually got the Sherlock Holmes books to prop up against it!

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By in United Kingdom,

It looks nice when folded out but very expensive for a thin facade, and doesn't look much when folded up. There have been so many versions of Sherlock, that the minifigures are a bit unidentifiable. I think I prefer the CMF detective. Watson also looks a bit weird with the darker skin tone.

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By in United Kingdom,

I would rather buy $130 worth of actual books.

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By in Germany,

I hate fleshy minifigures. And I don't even understand the rules around it anymore? Literary figures are now skin-colored, too? Why? Why are some historical figures fleshies like Galileo and others not like Shakespeare? I think both should simply be yellow. I mean, that what lego is aught to be right? What is lego's stance on the issue anymore? Is it all about diversity or is the lego figure neutral? In the same vain of recent discussions around waist prints on torsos and that all female-coded minifigures need to wear make-up. I think flesh-colored minifigures look kind of grotesque and dip into the uncanny valley for me.

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By in Germany,

On another note: I'm a huge sucker for anything historical themed and I am very disappointed by these Victorian minifigs. Not one cravat. And especially the dress is so inaccurate :(

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By in United States,

Why is it open in the back when closed? I’ve never seen a book nook like that.

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By in Colombia,

This is a very cool looking thing, although I feel some of the figures are a bit lacking... Doctor Watson and Irene Adler are fantastic, but Holmes face is a little generic, and Moriarty is a bit too cartoony... If I may get a bit nerdy...

"His appearance was quite familiar to me. He is extremely tall and thin, his forehead domes out in a white curve, and his two eyes are deeply sunken in his head. He is clean-shaven, pale, and ascetic-looking, retaining something of the professor in his features."

So... Beard stubble?

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By in United States,

$130 LOL ??

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By in United States,

I like this; it's a neat concept.

Looking forward to seeing the Bridge of Khazad-dûm one when it's revealed.

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By in Austria,

@alLEGOry_HJB2810 said:
" @dimc said:
"Would love to see a Book theme. Either fold-out like the Harry Potter, nooks like this, or bookends for something like LOTR where there aren't a lot of streets to recreate, but you could easily make Bag End/Hobbiton and Minas Tirith. For something like LOTR, you could even make it a special type to hold your fancy editions, and with Technic pieces it could slide open to fit whatever version you have. "

Well youre in luck buddy- there's going to be a Gandalf vs Durin's Bane booknook later this year- and probably a HP one too"


Hell to the yes. The bridge across the middle is brilliant.
LOL if they just used brickheadz for it though.

I don't buy HP stuff anymore (for obvious reasons) but I do think Diagon Alley would be a great design.

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By in Netherlands,

@GirlWoman said:
"I hate fleshy minifigures. And I don't even understand the rules around it anymore? Literary figures are now skin-colored, too? Why? Why are some historical figures fleshies like Galileo and others not like Shakespeare? I think both should simply be yellow. I mean, that what lego is aught to be right? What is lego's stance on the issue anymore? Is it all about diversity or is the lego figure neutral? In the same vain of recent discussions around waist prints on torsos and that all female-coded minifigures need to wear make-up. I think flesh-colored minifigures look kind of grotesque and dip into the uncanny valley for me."

Then just replace the fleshy parts with yellow parts. It's LEGO, you can just do that.

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

@johleth said:
"I would rather buy $130 worth of actual books."

SO fair dude

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By in United States,

Jawa robe potential.

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By in Germany,

Too many pieces, thus too expensive but it looks great, I like it.

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By in Netherlands,

@CapnRex101 The price in € is actually 120, not 130.

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By in Ireland,

The price is €119.99 when you click on the actual link to the Lego site.

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By in United Kingdom,

@Tuzi said:
" @GirlWoman said:
"I hate fleshy minifigures. And I don't even understand the rules around it anymore? Literary figures are now skin-colored, too? Why? Why are some historical figures fleshies like Galileo and others not like Shakespeare? I think both should simply be yellow. I mean, that what lego is aught to be right? What is lego's stance on the issue anymore? Is it all about diversity or is the lego figure neutral? In the same vain of recent discussions around waist prints on torsos and that all female-coded minifigures need to wear make-up. I think flesh-colored minifigures look kind of grotesque and dip into the uncanny valley for me."

Then just replace the fleshy parts with yellow parts. It's LEGO, you can just do that."


See, I used to share @GirlWoman 's opinion but guess what converted me to fleshies? The D&D minifig series. It was the first one that I collected all of (plus spares) and I am soo happy I did- it's awesome. I've realised that the flesh tone really adds to the realism of a scene since it doesn't mess with the colour scheme and you can give your characters a bit more of a 'real' feel. Now I don't have anything against yellow skin tone minifigs, I probably use it more tbh since I have about 5 times as many yellow skin minifigs as fleshies, but if I could magically change all my yellow heads to more realistic coloured heads, I would. I don't have opinions of what should be yellow and what should be fleshy other than movie characters being skin-tone, but I do think that they should make sets with skin-tone minifigs the same value as yellow minifigs rather than keeping fleshies exclusive to overpriced HP and SW sets.

Gravatar
By in Switzerland,

I love the vibe, however, I don't care much of the format
will not buy it day one at that price

Gravatar
By in United States,

@alLEGOry_HJB2810 said:
" @dimc said:
"Would love to see a Book theme. Either fold-out like the Harry Potter, nooks like this, or bookends for something like LOTR where there aren't a lot of streets to recreate, but you could easily make Bag End/Hobbiton and Minas Tirith. For something like LOTR, you could even make it a special type to hold your fancy editions, and with Technic pieces it could slide open to fit whatever version you have. "

Well youre in luck buddy- there's going to be a Gandalf vs Durin's Bane booknook later this year- and probably a HP one too"


Yeah photos of a Hogwarts Express booknook are already out there for HP. Personally though, very excited for the Balrog one!

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By in United Kingdom,

@sipuss and @vizzitor - Thank you, I have once again been misled by the press release provided.

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By in United States,

Like it, but haven't I seen knock-off brands advertising nooks like these for the last year on Insta? A little late to the party LEGO.

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By in United States,

@GirlWoman said:
"I hate fleshy minifigures. And I don't even understand the rules around it anymore? Literary figures are now skin-colored, too? Why? Why are some historical figures fleshies like Galileo and others not like Shakespeare? I think both should simply be yellow. I mean, that what lego is aught to be right? What is lego's stance on the issue anymore? Is it all about diversity or is the lego figure neutral? In the same vain of recent discussions around waist prints on torsos and that all female-coded minifigures need to wear make-up. I think flesh-colored minifigures look kind of grotesque and dip into the uncanny valley for me."

Grotesque seems a bit far, but to each his own ig lol. I personally don't see how Lego's standard is all that confusing though. If it's a third-party IP or an actual person that lived in real life, they get flesh tones. If it's Lego's IP, then it gets yellow. The Shakespeare is a weird one because it was based on the Lego movie which for its own reasons decided to make him yellow, and the physical figure followed suit. If Lego had made an independent set including Shakespeare, I think it's safe to assume he would have been flesh tone.

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

@GirlWoman said:
"I hate fleshy minifigures. And I don't even understand the rules around it anymore? Literary figures are now skin-colored, too? Why? "

Now? Scrooge and Co. were fleshie five years ago. Personally, I prefer all real or fictional characters to be fleshie and only LEGO's in-house figures to be yellow.

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By in Netherlands,

LEGO Elementary, my dear Watson

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By in United Kingdom,

Moriarty seems to be a mix of Sam Sinister, the Penguin and Buzz Killington.

I never pictured him as a monocle wearer.

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By in United Kingdom,

I love this, great for my bookshelves. No matter how many books I have, and I have a lot, there's always a gap because of height or width. Hope to see more than HP or Lotr though.

Looking forward to this new theme and can't wait to see a modular 221B.

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By in United States,

Only the Barnes & Noble website has this [with distorted product photos] here in the US. $130 USD. The link to the US Lego website gets a 404. Searching for the set here in the US produces the same results. Will Lego ever get it together? If you're gonna promote a set to websites and such, at least create a web page for the set on your own website.

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By in Germany,

It's funny that all images on the box seems to be renders only and the only picture with an actual person shows all the known bad quality bricks with highly visible mould marks.

So Lego is aware how bad the quality has gotten and they simply don't care and lie on the box about it.

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By in Hungary,

@IgelCampus said:
"It's funny that all images on the box seems to be renders only and the only picture with an actual person shows all the known bad quality bricks with highly visible mould marks.

So Lego is aware how bad the quality has gotten and they simply don't care and lie on the box about it."


I... don't really see what you're talking about.

If it's about the moldlines (e.g.: on the sides of minifig legs) those have always been there.
If it's about the little dots of lighter plastic on bricks where the mold gets filled, those have (AFAIK) also always been there.

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By in United Kingdom,

@Your_Future_President said:
"Wait I really like this...
Lego saw a problem and came to fix it.
Like anyone reads books anymore "


You can't have enough books, there's nothing like the physical thing instead of an electronic copy

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By in United States,

I'd consider this if they were yellow. Why the heck aren't they yellow? Especially since it doesn't seem to be based on a particular item. And Holmes is in the public domain.

This significantly reduces the ability to mix-and-match pieces. I'd strongly consider this if they were yellow. But in flesh-tones, I'm not even wishlisting it.

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By in Japan,

Good grief Holmes! Being the ACD fan that i am, am i going to get this and suitably prop it next to my SH books for a while before i play out ‘A Scandal in Bohemia’ or ‘The Final Problem’ with 21034 or 40220 in the far background (or even swap out Sherlock's head for Benedict Cumberbatch's in 30652 ? Mmh..but goatee might make him look like a spiv here..oh, wait..unless it’s Robert Downey Jr’s head from 40334 , then I can do Guy Ritchie’s Sherlock!) Elementary my dear Watson!! But I'll wait till the price goes down first. It'll look like a popular set so i can see it getting discounted in good time. p.s will even enjoy trying to find a makeshift Mycroft figure too!

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By in United States,

@djcbs said:
"The set itself is lovely and a pretty cool idea.
The minifigures, unfortunately, are just D-E-I slop.

I'll get it with a massive discount that makes up for the crap minifigures I'll have to replace with custom ones."


Is the DEI in the room with you now?

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By in Germany,

@lego4elio said:
" @GirlWoman said:
"I hate fleshy minifigures. And I don't even understand the rules around it anymore? Literary figures are now skin-colored, too? Why? Why are some historical figures fleshies like Galileo and others not like Shakespeare? I think both should simply be yellow. I mean, that what lego is aught to be right? What is lego's stance on the issue anymore? Is it all about diversity or is the lego figure neutral? In the same vain of recent discussions around waist prints on torsos and that all female-coded minifigures need to wear make-up. I think flesh-colored minifigures look kind of grotesque and dip into the uncanny valley for me."

Grotesque seems a bit far, but to each his own ig lol. I personally don't see how Lego's standard is all that confusing though. If it's a third-party IP or an actual person that lived in real life, they get flesh tones. If it's Lego's IP, then it gets yellow. The Shakespeare is a weird one because it was based on the Lego movie which for its own reasons decided to make him yellow, and the physical figure followed suit. If Lego had made an independent set including Shakespeare, I think it's safe to assume he would have been flesh tone."


But it's a slippery slope. For many historical figures it is unclear what exact skin tone they had. Shakespeare is just one example. This plays into the myth of a homogenic white European culture.

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By in Germany,

@CCC said:
" @GirlWoman said:
"I hate fleshy minifigures. And I don't even understand the rules around it anymore? Literary figures are now skin-colored, too? Why? "

Now? Scrooge and Co. were fleshie five years ago. Personally, I prefer all real or fictional characters to be fleshie and only LEGO's in-house figures to be yellow.

"


See my other reply.

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By in United Kingdom,

A solid maybe

If the other book nooks are good I might end up with a few of them.

Really looking forward to seeing the Balrog one

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By in Germany,

@Tuzi said:
" @GirlWoman said:
"I hate fleshy minifigures. And I don't even understand the rules around it anymore? Literary figures are now skin-colored, too? Why? Why are some historical figures fleshies like Galileo and others not like Shakespeare? I think both should simply be yellow. I mean, that what lego is aught to be right? What is lego's stance on the issue anymore? Is it all about diversity or is the lego figure neutral? In the same vain of recent discussions around waist prints on torsos and that all female-coded minifigures need to wear make-up. I think flesh-colored minifigures look kind of grotesque and dip into the uncanny valley for me."

Then just replace the fleshy parts with yellow parts. It's LEGO, you can just do that."


Every comment section needs one guy to comment this exact thing. We are aware. This is a forum to discuss lego.

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

@djcbs said:
"The set itself is lovely and a pretty cool idea.
The minifigures, unfortunately, are just D-E-I slop.

I'll get it with a massive discount that makes up for the crap minifigures I'll have to replace with custom ones."


Ah 'DEI' the latest meaningless buzz word.

Please tell me what is it you are against?
Diversity? Ethnicity? Or Inclusion?

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By in United States,

This is really cool. At first I was concerned by it just being a facade, but it looks very playable and my kids would enjoy those aspects of it. Folding up to make Baker Street is just brilliant, and it really would fit nicely along modulars or the HP sets, or books. And having it made to be displayed with books suits the material perfectly.

I like how DOTS lives on with the bookcover too. You know exactly what's on the other side with that silhouette.

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By in United States,

This is definitely a little cartoonish for a set signed off on by the Doyle estate. Holmes in a deerstalker and Moriarty in a monocle and collared cape are right out of a caricatured serial; not so much the books. The set is still pretty fun, though. Looks like they had to make a new mold for Holmes because the CMF Series 5 hat was used once and retired so many years ago.

I also disagree with opinions that the flesh tones are a negative. It's an IP set, so making the figures human colors makes sense, and while a true Victorian populace would look less like the diversity of today, the set already demonstrates it's a broad pop-culture interpretation of the stories and complaining about the presence of varied skintones doesn't reflect well on a person.

Gravatar
By in Germany,

@alLEGOry_HJB2810 said:
" @Tuzi said:
" @GirlWoman said:
"I hate fleshy minifigures. And I don't even understand the rules around it anymore? Literary figures are now skin-colored, too? Why? Why are some historical figures fleshies like Galileo and others not like Shakespeare? I think both should simply be yellow. I mean, that what lego is aught to be right? What is lego's stance on the issue anymore? Is it all about diversity or is the lego figure neutral? In the same vain of recent discussions around waist prints on torsos and that all female-coded minifigures need to wear make-up. I think flesh-colored minifigures look kind of grotesque and dip into the uncanny valley for me."

Then just replace the fleshy parts with yellow parts. It's LEGO, you can just do that."


See, I used to share @GirlWoman 's opinion but guess what converted me to fleshies? The D&D minifig series. It was the first one that I collected all of (plus spares) and I am soo happy I did- it's awesome. I've realised that the flesh tone really adds to the realism of a scene since it doesn't mess with the colour scheme and you can give your characters a bit more of a 'real' feel. Now I don't have anything against yellow skin tone minifigs, I probably use it more tbh since I have about 5 times as many yellow skin minifigs as fleshies, but if I could magically change all my yellow heads to more realistic coloured heads, I would. I don't have opinions of what should be yellow and what should be fleshy other than movie characters being skin-tone, but I do think that they should make sets with skin-tone minifigs the same value as yellow minifigs rather than keeping fleshies exclusive to overpriced HP and SW sets."


D&D minifigs included heads for different genders. Why not one head for each gender and each skin tone? At the end of the day it only seems diversifying. But in reality it is limiting. Imagine you find a face print that is what you're looking for. Maybe it represents you. But it has the wrong skin tone and Lego never reprinted it on a different colored minfig head, so you're out of luck. This is what you're experiencing with fleshy heads being locked behind expensive licensed themes as well. If there were no fleshies you could take heads from anywhere.

On the topic of realism the only thing I have to say that lego exists kind of in a cartoony world. And as long as Lego sticks to the blocky minifigure that doesn't represent human proportions at all this won't change.

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

@CCC said:
"Watson also looks a bit weird with the darker skin tone."

He has been in Afghanistan, I perceive

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By in Belgium,

Umm should have stuck to yellow minifigs with this one, they would have avoided any form of controversy.

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By in Germany,

@GirlWoman said:
"On another note: I'm a huge sucker for anything historical themed and I am very disappointed by these Victorian minifigs. Not one cravat. And especially the dress is so inaccurate :("

And the hair! No black woman in the Victorian era would have worn her hair like this. This could've been our chance to get some old-school female hairdo as a mold and they flunked it. I was legit so looking forward to this and now not even one of them got sideburns :(

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By in United Kingdom,

@Elrond said:
"Umm should have stuck to yellow minifigs with this one, they would have avoided any form of controversy."

I disagree,
When placed alongside the upcoming Harry Potter and LOTR ones which will undoubtedly be realistic tones then it makes sense for this also to be to keep consistency between the sets

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By in United Kingdom,

Excellent. Looking forward to this and other upcoming releases in the series. Will get with a suitable offer. i.e. not the now pointless pre-order!

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By in United Kingdom,

@Elrond said:
"Umm should have stuck to yellow minifigs with this one, they would have avoided any form of controversy."

We need people to challenge our ideals.

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By in Austria,

This is far to expensive for the way it looks.

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By in Belgium,

I dont understand why they fill it up with details you are never going to see and play features you will never use, once you actually put it in a bookshelf... Also, why would you put this in a bookshelf, folded up, when it looks much better unfolded...seriously, I don't understand this.
There are great examples of book nooks online, but this is not one of them.
Also, that price?
This looks like 50-60€, not double that amount...

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

@GirlWoman said:
" @alLEGOry_HJB2810 said:
" @Tuzi said:
" @GirlWoman said:
"I hate fleshy minifigures. And I don't even understand the rules around it anymore? Literary figures are now skin-colored, too? Why? Why are some historical figures fleshies like Galileo and others not like Shakespeare? I think both should simply be yellow. I mean, that what lego is aught to be right? What is lego's stance on the issue anymore? Is it all about diversity or is the lego figure neutral? In the same vain of recent discussions around waist prints on torsos and that all female-coded minifigures need to wear make-up. I think flesh-colored minifigures look kind of grotesque and dip into the uncanny valley for me."

Then just replace the fleshy parts with yellow parts. It's LEGO, you can just do that."


See, I used to share @GirlWoman 's opinion but guess what converted me to fleshies? The D&D minifig series. It was the first one that I collected all of (plus spares) and I am soo happy I did- it's awesome. I've realised that the flesh tone really adds to the realism of a scene since it doesn't mess with the colour scheme and you can give your characters a bit more of a 'real' feel. Now I don't have anything against yellow skin tone minifigs, I probably use it more tbh since I have about 5 times as many yellow skin minifigs as fleshies, but if I could magically change all my yellow heads to more realistic coloured heads, I would. I don't have opinions of what should be yellow and what should be fleshy other than movie characters being skin-tone, but I do think that they should make sets with skin-tone minifigs the same value as yellow minifigs rather than keeping fleshies exclusive to overpriced HP and SW sets."


D&D minifigs included heads for different genders. Why not one head for each gender and each skin tone? At the end of the day it only seems diversifying. But in reality it is limiting. Imagine you find a face print that is what you're looking for. Maybe it represents you. But it has the wrong skin tone and Lego never reprinted it on a different colored minfig head, so you're out of luck. This is what you're experiencing with fleshy heads being locked behind expensive licensed themes as well. If there were no fleshies you could take heads from anywhere.

On the topic of realism the only thing I have to say that lego exists kind of in a cartoony world. And as long as Lego sticks to the blocky minifigure that doesn't represent human proportions at all this won't change."


The problem with having only yellow heads is that if you find one that represents you, it's guaranteed not to look much like you, unless you have really bad jaundice, and if you have two people with different skin colours, there's no way of represnting that. But both of those are only issues if you're making a sigfig, which isn't much of an issue tbh.

Also we're probably thinking too deeply about this. Some people prefer traditional yellow minifigs. I get that, and you're in that category. Some people prefer skin-tone minifigs. I get that too, and I'm in that category. It doesn't really matter what camp we fall into, we're all LEGO fans at the end of the day.

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By in United Kingdom,

Love the idea of lego books nooks and the concept, just not overly sure of the price given the way your meant to display folded up shows so little of it, and the cover. That and splitting 221B as they've done feels like I mistake. Think its still going on my buy list for sets I'll definitely own at some people.

Would prefer some different authors though... Maybe Sir Terry Pratchett, but thats something for later sets in the series.

Gravatar
By in Germany,

@alLEGOry_HJB2810 said:
" @GirlWoman said:
" @alLEGOry_HJB2810 said:
" @Tuzi said:
" @GirlWoman said:
"I hate fleshy minifigures. And I don't even understand the rules around it anymore? Literary figures are now skin-colored, too? Why? Why are some historical figures fleshies like Galileo and others not like Shakespeare? I think both should simply be yellow. I mean, that what lego is aught to be right? What is lego's stance on the issue anymore? Is it all about diversity or is the lego figure neutral? In the same vain of recent discussions around waist prints on torsos and that all female-coded minifigures need to wear make-up. I think flesh-colored minifigures look kind of grotesque and dip into the uncanny valley for me."

Then just replace the fleshy parts with yellow parts. It's LEGO, you can just do that."


See, I used to share @GirlWoman 's opinion but guess what converted me to fleshies? The D&D minifig series. It was the first one that I collected all of (plus spares) and I am soo happy I did- it's awesome. I've realised that the flesh tone really adds to the realism of a scene since it doesn't mess with the colour scheme and you can give your characters a bit more of a 'real' feel. Now I don't have anything against yellow skin tone minifigs, I probably use it more tbh since I have about 5 times as many yellow skin minifigs as fleshies, but if I could magically change all my yellow heads to more realistic coloured heads, I would. I don't have opinions of what should be yellow and what should be fleshy other than movie characters being skin-tone, but I do think that they should make sets with skin-tone minifigs the same value as yellow minifigs rather than keeping fleshies exclusive to overpriced HP and SW sets."


D&D minifigs included heads for different genders. Why not one head for each gender and each skin tone? At the end of the day it only seems diversifying. But in reality it is limiting. Imagine you find a face print that is what you're looking for. Maybe it represents you. But it has the wrong skin tone and Lego never reprinted it on a different colored minfig head, so you're out of luck. This is what you're experiencing with fleshy heads being locked behind expensive licensed themes as well. If there were no fleshies you could take heads from anywhere.

On the topic of realism the only thing I have to say that lego exists kind of in a cartoony world. And as long as Lego sticks to the blocky minifigure that doesn't represent human proportions at all this won't change."


The problem with having only yellow heads is that if you find one that represents you, it's guaranteed not to look much like you, unless you have really bad jaundice, and if you have two people with different skin colours, there's no way of represnting that. But both of those are only issues if you're making a sigfig, which isn't much of an issue tbh.

Also we're probably thinking too deeply about this. Some people prefer traditional yellow minifigs. I get that, and you're in that category. Some people prefer skin-tone minifigs. I get that too, and I'm in that category. It doesn't really matter what camp we fall into, we're all LEGO fans at the end of the day."


It wouldn't be an issue if your team wasn't annexing my turf (historical sets) (I'm only kidding) (kinda)

Gravatar
By in Belgium,

@bnic99 said:
" @Elrond said:
"Umm should have stuck to yellow minifigs with this one, they would have avoided any form of controversy."

I disagree,
When placed alongside the upcoming Harry Potter and LOTR ones which will undoubtedly be realistic tones then it makes sense for this also to be to keep consistency between the sets"


The difference being those other sets are based on movies, which means the minifigs are portraying the actors. Here it's Lego deciding what the characters will look like.

Gravatar
By in Germany,

Can we add a new tag «Book Nook»?
I think it's going to be useful considering the other upcoming sets.

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

So Lego made a Book Nook and vandalised the spines of the books to obscure the titles to do the box photos...? Seems to give a mixed message about the value of books.
Hope they only did it 'digitally' rather than to the real books.
Nice set though.

Gravatar
By in United States,

@GirlWoman said:
" @GirlWoman said:
"On another note: I'm a huge sucker for anything historical themed and I am very disappointed by these Victorian minifigs. Not one cravat. And especially the dress is so inaccurate :("

And the hair! No black woman in the Victorian era would have worn her hair like this. This could've been our chance to get some old-school female hairdo as a mold and they flunked it. I was legit so looking forward to this and now not even one of them got sideburns :("


Yeah, I have no problem with The Woman being black, but that hair was the wrong call. Moriarty looks rather cartoony, as well. Watson, OTOH, is a great figure.

Gravatar
By in Latvia,

@WolfpackBricksStudios said:
"Irene's dress would actually be perfect for my Wolfpack queen"

Would it? That dress seems completely Victorian, unless ye have an eclectic idea in mind.

Gravatar
By in Germany,

@Bricklunch said:
"So Lego made a Book Nook and vandalised the spines of the books to obscure the titles to do the box photos...? Seems to give a mixed message about the value of books.
Hope they only did it 'digitally' rather than to the real books.
Nice set though."


Good eye! This is kinda insane to me. Why didn't they just use Sherlock Holmes books instead of destroying old books?????

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

Interesting set, but not sure what time-period this is supposed to be representing.

Gravatar
By in Serbia,

What a puzzling design… Isn’t the whole point of a book nook to have a backwall that creates a sense of looking into a small scene? Here, you just have the sides that can be barely seen, which defeats the purpose. It would have made much more sense to add two hinges and have it make a U-shape when folded.

@Ayliffe said:
"(talking of deals, very interesting that it's specifically signed off by The Conan Doyle Estate too - was fully expecting for em to just use the Holmes books currently in the public domain, but I guess not!)"

Technically they didn’t have to, but knowing how litigious the Doyle estate is, it makes sense for them to err on the side of caution. And it adds an “air of legitimacy” in marketing terms, no doubt.

Gravatar
By in Russian Federation,

I hope it has enough weight to hold the books

Gravatar
By in United States,

@GirlWoman said:
" @Bricklunch said:
"So Lego made a Book Nook and vandalised the spines of the books to obscure the titles to do the box photos...? Seems to give a mixed message about the value of books.
Hope they only did it 'digitally' rather than to the real books.
Nice set though."


Good eye! This is kinda insane to me. Why didn't they just use Sherlock Holmes books instead of destroying old books?????"


If they used Sherlock Holmes books, they would probably have to pay a fee to the publisher. The books are in public domain, but whatever company prints them probably would want a licensing fee since it's "their" version of it. It would have their logo on the spine, etc. If anything LEGO most likely rented the books from a prop house that already damaged the books this way to then be used without any issues of paying fees to companies.

Gravatar
By in Japan,

@EvilTwin said:
" @CCC said:
"Watson also looks a bit weird with the darker skin tone."

He has been in Afghanistan, I perceive
"


Hahaha! My thoughts exactly!

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

@EvilTwin said:
" @CCC said:
"Watson also looks a bit weird with the darker skin tone."

He has been in Afghanistan, I perceive
"


Indeed, as given away by his rich tan, specifically described as making him look “nut brown” in the books

Gravatar
By in Poland,

Imagine paying that much for 1/4 of modular xD

Gravatar
By in Sweden,

Stickers? Disappointing. Also very overpriced in SEK compared to EUR. Otherwise instant buy. Now, I think I'll pass.

Gravatar
By in Puerto Rico,

I really thought this was a new modular.

Gravatar
By in Germany,

@Adrienn said:
" @IgelCampus said:
"It's funny that all images on the box seems to be renders only and the only picture with an actual person shows all the known bad quality bricks with highly visible mould marks.

So Lego is aware how bad the quality has gotten and they simply don't care and lie on the box about it."


I... don't really see what you're talking about.

If it's about the moldlines (e.g.: on the sides of minifig legs) those have always been there.
If it's about the little dots of lighter plastic on bricks where the mold gets filled, those have (AFAIK) also always been there."


But they have never been so visible and noticeable. In some of last sets I've build they were so dented that they matched Xingbao's quality level. I guess they are using the molds much longer than in the good old days.

For example the 42128 was so horrible that I started to look for the mold mark on each part before putting it into place it looked really ugly especially when several beams where combined into one flat area.

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

I love this set and I love 'fleshies,' and Irene Adler isn't a character who is particularly defined by race/ethnicity (Adler is commonly a Jewish surname, but that doesn't preclude her from being Black).

I'll do my best to avoid criticising certain posters for their 'issues' with diversity, but dare I say that it is worrying that some of these 'concerns' are coming from nations like Austria and Germany? (uh-oh, here comes the backlash...)

Gravatar
By in United States,

@Jotahesse1 said:
"Like it, but haven't I seen knock-off brands advertising nooks like these for the last year on Insta? A little late to the party LEGO."

Yep, was gonna say the same thing.
For like a couple years knock off brands have had LOTR, Star Wars, cyberpunk, etc. book nooks.
LEGO definitely got inspired by those.

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

@AliveAndBricking said:
" (uh-oh, here comes the backlash...)"

Maybe try not making such inflammatory comments then
Good grief these threads get toxic sometimes

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

@AliveAndBricking said:
"I love this set and I love 'fleshies,' and Irene Adler isn't a character who is particularly defined by race/ethnicity (Adler is commonly a Jewish surname, but that doesn't preclude her from being Black).

I'll do my best to avoid criticising certain posters for their 'issues' with diversity, but dare I say that it is worrying that some of these 'concerns' are coming from nations like Austria and Germany? (uh-oh, here comes the backlash...)"


^&*£^$*)(£"*&^$2(^*"£($&*(£&$&£^%$("£*$&^%*£"$)("£&$%^!"*£(^*!"^£&"*&!(£*$^&£"*$(!!!
:P

Gravatar
By in Germany,

@AliveAndBricking said:
"I love this set and I love 'fleshies,' and Irene Adler isn't a character who is particularly defined by race/ethnicity (Adler is commonly a Jewish surname, but that doesn't preclude her from being Black).

I'll do my best to avoid criticising certain posters for their 'issues' with diversity, but dare I say that it is worrying that some of these 'concerns' are coming from nations like Austria and Germany? (uh-oh, here comes the backlash...)"


Don't misconstrue my argument. I'm not against DEIB or this character being portrayed as black.

Gravatar
By in United States,

Book-nook collectors probably know better but I think here LEGO has a flawed design.
Isn’t the nook supposed to have a detailed closed in back to give the illusion of depth, street extending, etc.?

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

@EvilTwin said:
" @AliveAndBricking said:
" (uh-oh, here comes the backlash...)"

Maybe try not making such inflammatory comments then
Good grief these threads get toxic sometimes
"


One could expect that people brought together over a love of the plastic brick will find something to hate each other for.

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

@GirlWoman said:
" @alLEGOry_HJB2810 said:
" @GirlWoman said:
" @alLEGOry_HJB2810 said:
" @Tuzi said:
" @GirlWoman said:
"I hate fleshy minifigures. And I don't even understand the rules around it anymore? Literary figures are now skin-colored, too? Why? Why are some historical figures fleshies like Galileo and others not like Shakespeare? I think both should simply be yellow. I mean, that what lego is aught to be right? What is lego's stance on the issue anymore? Is it all about diversity or is the lego figure neutral? In the same vain of recent discussions around waist prints on torsos and that all female-coded minifigures need to wear make-up. I think flesh-colored minifigures look kind of grotesque and dip into the uncanny valley for me."

Then just replace the fleshy parts with yellow parts. It's LEGO, you can just do that."


See, I used to share @GirlWoman 's opinion but guess what converted me to fleshies? The D&D minifig series. It was the first one that I collected all of (plus spares) and I am soo happy I did- it's awesome. I've realised that the flesh tone really adds to the realism of a scene since it doesn't mess with the colour scheme and you can give your characters a bit more of a 'real' feel. Now I don't have anything against yellow skin tone minifigs, I probably use it more tbh since I have about 5 times as many yellow skin minifigs as fleshies, but if I could magically change all my yellow heads to more realistic coloured heads, I would. I don't have opinions of what should be yellow and what should be fleshy other than movie characters being skin-tone, but I do think that they should make sets with skin-tone minifigs the same value as yellow minifigs rather than keeping fleshies exclusive to overpriced HP and SW sets."


D&D minifigs included heads for different genders. Why not one head for each gender and each skin tone? At the end of the day it only seems diversifying. But in reality it is limiting. Imagine you find a face print that is what you're looking for. Maybe it represents you. But it has the wrong skin tone and Lego never reprinted it on a different colored minfig head, so you're out of luck. This is what you're experiencing with fleshy heads being locked behind expensive licensed themes as well. If there were no fleshies you could take heads from anywhere.

On the topic of realism the only thing I have to say that lego exists kind of in a cartoony world. And as long as Lego sticks to the blocky minifigure that doesn't represent human proportions at all this won't change."


The problem with having only yellow heads is that if you find one that represents you, it's guaranteed not to look much like you, unless you have really bad jaundice, and if you have two people with different skin colours, there's no way of represnting that. But both of those are only issues if you're making a sigfig, which isn't much of an issue tbh.

Also we're probably thinking too deeply about this. Some people prefer traditional yellow minifigs. I get that, and you're in that category. Some people prefer skin-tone minifigs. I get that too, and I'm in that category. It doesn't really matter what camp we fall into, we're all LEGO fans at the end of the day."


It wouldn't be an issue if your team wasn't annexing my turf (historical sets) (I'm only kidding) (kinda)"


I'm just saying, it's not an issue unless you make it one. It's a difference in opinion, which is fine.

@EvilTwin said:
" @AliveAndBricking said:
" (uh-oh, here comes the backlash...)"

Maybe try not making such inflammatory comments then
Good grief these threads get toxic sometimes
"


Good grief these threads get long sometimes

Gravatar
By in United States,

Next do a Dune one! Would go great with the upcoming movie and ornithopter..
Could have Paul riding a sandworm towards the viewer with micro ornithopters and city or a sietch in the background

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

@IgelCampus said:
" @Adrienn said:
" @IgelCampus said:
"It's funny that all images on the box seems to be renders only and the only picture with an actual person shows all the known bad quality bricks with highly visible mould marks.

So Lego is aware how bad the quality has gotten and they simply don't care and lie on the box about it."


I... don't really see what you're talking about.

If it's about the moldlines (e.g.: on the sides of minifig legs) those have always been there.
If it's about the little dots of lighter plastic on bricks where the mold gets filled, those have (AFAIK) also always been there."


But they have never been so visible and noticeable. In some of last sets I've build they were so dented that they matched Xingbao's quality level. I guess they are using the molds much longer than in the good old days.

For example the 42128 was so horrible that I started to look for the mold mark on each part before putting it into place it looked really ugly especially when several beams where combined into one flat area."


You want to know the set I have with the most visible mould marks? It was 6382 from the 80s. Every red brick has a horrible white spot and is by far worse than all the mould marks I have from modern-day sets (excluding the 6x6 tile). I think that Lego's mould marks have gotten better over time rather than worse.

Gravatar
By in Canada,

@dimc said:
"Would love to see a Book theme. Either fold-out like the Harry Potter, nooks like this, or bookends for something like LOTR where there aren't a lot of streets to recreate, but you could easily make Bag End/Hobbiton and Minas Tirith. For something like LOTR, you could even make it a special type to hold your fancy editions, and with Technic pieces it could slide open to fit whatever version you have. "

I knew a guy who had designed LOTR bookends, put them on Lego Ideas, got 10,000 votes, and then had it taken down by Lego when the LOTR theme was rebooted. It would have been cool!

Gravatar
By in United States,

So one problem with this when it’s opened is that it puts odd and even numbers on the same side of the street. Looks like 222 ends up in the other side when it’s folded (not that you can read it from the other end of the alley). And they went with the deerstalker hat. I’ve never read single Sherlock Holmes story, but even I know he only wore that _once_.

@magpie9:
How exactly would you block the end? Presumably the street continues on, and doing a forced perspective street that fades off into the distance would be incredibly difficult without using up most of the depth.

@Jotahesse1:
We’ve known that a Balrog has been coming for several months, so if images leaked early enough, it’s always possible that your clone brands cribbed the concept and just rushed to post.

@Adrienn:
The issue with pips (aka gate marks) is that sometimes they’ve been located somewhere unobtrusive (top of the stud, somewhere on the underside, etc.), and other times they’re on a side or end where they’re more likely to be visible in the middle of a MOC. For instance, the double cheese wedge used to have some on the left end and others on the right, so you could frequently pick which one to put where so the pip was hidden. Now they all have them on the same end, so frequently half of them end up showing.

@AliveAndBricking:
I won’t say which one (spoilers), but one adaptation even has Adler secretly being Moriarty, and at least one has Watson being female, so there’s definitely some flexibility.

Gravatar
By in United States,

@bnic99 said:
" @djcbs said:
"The set itself is lovely and a pretty cool idea.
The minifigures, unfortunately, are just D-E-I slop.

I'll get it with a massive discount that makes up for the crap minifigures I'll have to replace with custom ones."


Ah 'DEI' the latest meaningless buzz word.

Please tell me what is it you are against?
Diversity? Ethnicity? Or Inclusion?"

Not to belabor the point, but I think the E is for equity. :o)

Gravatar
By in United States,

Amidst all the other wrong opinions in this comment thread (as usual), I'll add my own inflammatory remark: WTF is this? A "book-nook"? What kind of stupid idea is that? If you have a gap in your bookshelf, why not fill it with... I don't know... a book? Maybe read it, too, while you're at it. You might learn something.

And $130 for a little facade - which you can't even see when the set is used according to its stated purpose - is ridiculous. Anyone could build one of these with their spare parts and it'd look just the same when crammed into a bookshelf.

It's well-designed and nicely detailed, no doubt - LEGO designers really are at the top of their game these days - but it's such a silly concept. And if the above comments about the LotR one of these are true, ouch. Not interested in a pancaked Balrog and a grey wall. Slap in the face to anyone that wanted a proper full-size Balrog set.

@IgelCampus said:
"It's funny that all images on the box seems to be renders only and the only picture with an actual person shows all the known bad quality bricks with highly visible mould marks."

Not sure about that actually - on the box art, you can see the color differences between the dark tan and dark orange bricks in the wall, you can see how a lot of the bricks don't fit together cleanly (and some are misaligned), and I believe you can also see the photography equipment reflected off the dark green dome piece. This one might be a real photo for once, perhaps only touched up a bit during editing.

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

@BLProductions said:
"Amidst all the other wrong opinions in this comment thread (as usual), I'll add my own inflammatory remark: WTF is this? A "book-nook"? What kind of stupid idea is that? If you have a gap in your bookshelf, why not fill it with... I don't know... a book? Maybe read it, too, while you're at it. You might learn something.

And $130 for a little facade - which you can't even see when the set is used according to its stated purpose - is ridiculous. Anyone could build one of these with their spare parts and it'd look just the same when crammed into a bookshelf.

It's well-designed and nicely detailed, no doubt - LEGO designers really are at the top of their game these days - but it's such a silly concept. And if the above comments about the LotR one of these are true, ouch. Not interested in a pancaked Balrog and a grey wall. Slap in the face to anyone that wanted a proper full-size Balrog set.

@IgelCampus said:
"It's funny that all images on the box seems to be renders only and the only picture with an actual person shows all the known bad quality bricks with highly visible mould marks."

Not sure about that actually - on the box art, you can see the color differences between the dark tan and dark orange bricks in the wall, you can see how a lot of the bricks don't fit together cleanly (and some are misaligned), and I believe you can also see the photography equipment reflected off the dark green dome piece. This one might be a real photo for once, perhaps only touched up a bit during editing. "


Lol you can see a bunch of that person's home reflected off the dark green dome haha

Gravatar
By in United States,

You guys know that minifigures are made up of individual pieces you can swap out, right? That's like the whole point of Lego.

If you're gonna be that (to put it kindly) nitpicky, I expect to see that same fervor about the Katara and Sokka minifigs when light brown ("Metru brown") existed. I expect the same opinions on the Rodian and Duros rebels we never saw in the films in 71533 as you do about the POC we never saw in the films in 40557.

Gravatar
By in Netherlands,

Always loved book nooks, no matter what they are made of....yet somehow I have none. Well, main reason is I'm already short on shelf space for alle the actual books....

Have looked at some from other brands before, Lego is indeed a bit late to the pary, but for most part I like what they did here. There's some nice depth to it, and good detail. And I like how the outside is finished, even when you're not gonna see it.

That said, the open back end is a bit disappointing, a solution you often see in those book nooks is to make it all curve away to one side. They could have done that here, but at the cost of not making it look weird when folded open. But then again, what's supposed to be the primary way to display it, open or closed? Well, guess the front of the box kinda gives us the answer....

Also would have prefered the top to be closed, and book nooks kinda really need some lights.

Still, good set, with a decent discount I might just pick one up....

Gravatar
By in South Africa,

Love the concept, but the price is, once again, ridiculous. £100+ for a folding facade? Even compared to other Lego sets that's absurd

Gravatar
By in United States,

Not for me, but looks interesting but I’m not sure about the look of it folded in. It looks far too cramped and difficult to notice all the sweet details. I’m hoping the LotR booknook executes that better.

Gravatar
By in New Zealand,

I'm glad that it can open up, because having it fixed as a book nook wouldn't be as good or visually striking as it is opened up.

Gravatar
By in United States,

Frankly, I love this. I have a pretty large collection of books, and this is a great way to display LEGO and books together!

Alas, as soon as I saw that Irene Adler I KNEW the comments were going to be a proper disaster. Funny how the SHOULD HAVE BEEN YELLOW FIGS brigade never fails to show up when LEGO includes deeper-toned figures in its sets.

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By in United States,

@yellowcastle said:
"I have very strong feelings about this, but I’m not yet sure what they are. (In deference to @StyleCounselor )"

Deference acknowledged and appreciated. Let's try: exciting, excellent, yet extraneous, and extraordinarily expensive. Evidently Lego has seen the secondary market figures for 40698 and decided to cash in.

The only thing Mrs. StyleCounselor complains about being strewn about the house compared to Lego are my piles of books.

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

@emQ said:
"I'd consider this if they were yellow. Why the heck aren't they yellow? Especially since it doesn't seem to be based on a particular item. And Holmes is in the public domain.

This significantly reduces the ability to mix-and-match pieces. I'd strongly consider this if they were yellow. But in flesh-tones, I'm not even wishlisting it."


Which pieces can't you mix and match? The torsos here are perfect in that they have no skin printed on them so anyone wanting yellowskins can switch heads and hands for yellow and you have the set you want.

Gravatar
By in United States,

@GirlWoman said:
" @lego4elio said:
" @GirlWoman said:
"I hate fleshy minifigures. And I don't even understand the rules around it anymore? Literary figures are now skin-colored, too? Why? Why are some historical figures fleshies like Galileo and others not like Shakespeare? I think both should simply be yellow. I mean, that what lego is aught to be right? What is lego's stance on the issue anymore? Is it all about diversity or is the lego figure neutral? In the same vain of recent discussions around waist prints on torsos and that all female-coded minifigures need to wear make-up. I think flesh-colored minifigures look kind of grotesque and dip into the uncanny valley for me."

Grotesque seems a bit far, but to each his own ig lol. I personally don't see how Lego's standard is all that confusing though. If it's a third-party IP or an actual person that lived in real life, they get flesh tones. If it's Lego's IP, then it gets yellow. The Shakespeare is a weird one because it was based on the Lego movie which for its own reasons decided to make him yellow, and the physical figure followed suit. If Lego had made an independent set including Shakespeare, I think it's safe to assume he would have been flesh tone."


But it's a slippery slope. For many historical figures it is unclear what exact skin tone they had. Shakespeare is just one example. This plays into the myth of a homogenic white European culture."


It really isn't slippery at all. You're trying to add controversy where there isn't much. We pretty much all go by the Chandos portrait of what Shakespeare looked like. If you want to argue that's not necessarily exactly proven to be what he looks like historically, it's not really relevant in this context. A minifigure is just a caricature of the person, so it needs to resemble the version that is recognizable in society. It's not really that hard to do that

Gravatar
By in Germany,

From the looks of it, the Moriarty minifigure could also be Lupin.

Gravatar
By in United States,

I hope this bombs so it doesn't get turned into a series, but I'm sure it will do well and we will get more half-done overpriced facades in our lives

Gravatar
By in Germany,

@WemWem said:
"Frankly, I love this. I have a pretty large collection of books, and this is a great way to display LEGO and books together!

Alas, as soon as I saw that Irene Adler I KNEW the comments were going to be a proper disaster. Funny how the SHOULD HAVE BEEN YELLOW FIGS brigade never fails to show up when LEGO includes deeper-toned figures in its sets."


When I made this point I had no idea how many users would think I am motivated because I am anti-woke or some bs. I AM THE WOKEST

Gravatar
By in Germany,

@IgelCampus said:
[[It's funny that all images on the box seems to be renders only and the only picture with an actual person shows all the known bad quality bricks with highly visible mould marks.]]

Not sure about that actually - on the box art, you can see the color differences between the dark tan and dark orange bricks in the wall, you can see how a lot of the bricks don't fit together cleanly (and some are misaligned), and I believe you can also see the photography equipment reflected off the dark green dome piece. This one might be a real photo for once, perhaps only touched up a bit during editing. ]]

Lol you can see a bunch of that person's home reflected off the dark green dome haha]]

You are right. But this is even worse because then they have taken actual images and photoshopped them so all the mold marks are removed. Just look at the gold bars or other typical bricks with always visible marks. So my argument stands that they know about the quality issues and simply lie on the packaging.

Gravatar
By in United States,

... and Holmes only wore a cap with flaps in one ACD story.
It's not supposed to be authentic, Holmes has always been reinterpreted.
I really like the idea of The woman being black: to have European royalty trying to cover up a diverse relationship in 1890-something would be a great plot enhancement.
No pipe! Ahhh... actually, yes, I see. Don't want to encourage the young chaps to smoke, what?
Jolly Good.
Carry on.

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

@PurpleDave said:
"So one problem with this when it’s opened is that it puts odd and even numbers on the same side of the street. Looks like 222 ends up in the other side when it’s folded (not that you can read it from the other end of the alley). And they went with the deerstalker hat. I’ve never read single Sherlock Holmes story, but even I know he only wore that _once_."
No, never. In none of the stories written by ACD is Holmes said to be wearing a dearstalker. That said, illustrations published in ACD’s lifetime showed Holmes wearing one. Whether the author approved those illustrations or not is unclear.

@Pongo said:
"... and Holmes only wore a cap with flaps in one ACD story."
Almost certainly ear flaps. A cap’s peaks weren’t called ‘flaps’ in ACD’s time. Besides, if he had meant a dearstalker, he would have said.

@CCC said:
" @emQ said:
"I'd consider this if they were yellow. Why the heck aren't they yellow? Especially since it doesn't seem to be based on a particular item. And Holmes is in the public domain.

This significantly reduces the ability to mix-and-match pieces. I'd strongly consider this if they were yellow. But in flesh-tones, I'm not even wishlisting it."


Which pieces can't you mix and match? The torsos here are perfect in that they have no skin printed on them so anyone wanting yellowskins can switch heads and hands for yellow and you have the set you want. "

I already have yellow heads prepared for three of the minifigures in the forthcoming Fantastic Four set: Richards and the two Storms. And yes, I will be taking a yellow Sharpie to Galactus’ face.

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By in United Kingdom,

@VoidSeeker said:
"From the looks of it, the Moriarty minifigure could also be Lupin."

Oh yeah there were some crossover books weren't there?
Speaking of Lupin, I really want some Netflix Lupin sets. Those would be awesome. I'd like Omar Sy to have a minifig other than https://brickset.com/minifigs/jw005.

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By in Belgium,

@WemWem said:
"Frankly, I love this. I have a pretty large collection of books, and this is a great way to display LEGO and books together!

Alas, as soon as I saw that Irene Adler I KNEW the comments were going to be a proper disaster. Funny how the SHOULD HAVE BEEN YELLOW FIGS brigade never fails to show up when LEGO includes deeper-toned figures in its sets."


Do they now? I've never seen that being said about a Black Panther set or a set that includes Mace Windu. Why? Because they are original characters. What a lot of people don't like, including POC, is race-swapping because it's cheap, lazy and not very genuine.
"So you guys want diversity? Ok but we're not gonna put in the effort to just create new interesting characters so we'll race-swap existing ones instead. That should be enough, right?"
Should people now feel better because Moriarty is brown too? More people can now feel represented as villains I guess...

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By in Canada,

@Your_Future_President said:
"Wait I really like this...
Lego saw a problem and came to fix it.
Like anyone reads books anymore "


Good timing...unpacked all my books into my library...sadly need more shelves :)

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By in United States,

@IgelCampus said:
" @Adrienn said:
" @IgelCampus said:
"It's funny that all images on the box seems to be renders only and the only picture with an actual person shows all the known bad quality bricks with highly visible mould marks.

So Lego is aware how bad the quality has gotten and they simply don't care and lie on the box about it."


I... don't really see what you're talking about.

If it's about the moldlines (e.g.: on the sides of minifig legs) those have always been there.
If it's about the little dots of lighter plastic on bricks where the mold gets filled, those have (AFAIK) also always been there."


But they have never been so visible and noticeable. In some of last sets I've build they were so dented that they matched Xingbao's quality level. I guess they are using the molds much longer than in the good old days.

For example the 42128 was so horrible that I started to look for the mold mark on each part before putting it into place it looked really ugly especially when several beams where combined into one flat area."


I've built a knock-off set and the mold marks/pips were way better than Lego.
They were indented a bit more so you don't see the 'white' mark as much and were smoother too than Lego so those pips really blend in.
When I switched out many parts for official Lego elements, Lego's pips were way more noticeable.

Even the newest Temple of the Golden Idol Indiana Jones set...Indy's hat, which is a great new element with dual molded hair, had two extremely noticeable pip marks, one on top of the crown of the hat and the other on top of the brim. Which for a top of the line set and great new minifigure, l thought was poor quality control especially with white spots clearly standing out over the reddish brown hat.

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By in United States,

@BLProductions:
I haven’t watched this one myself, but I did see it come up as a suggestion. Basically, for many, it’s a form of artistic expression, not unlike what many of us do with little plastic bricks. It may even be an open secret, as something you can be within arm’s reach of, but be unaware of unless the owner decides to point it out, or you’re just that much of a bibliophile.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=n4ZpkuMC29w&pp=ygUWQm9vayBub29rIGRpYWdvbiBhbGxleQ%3D%3D

@ShilohCyan:
That can get tricky, if the body parts have bits of exposed skin printed on them, like an open collar. D&D CMFs did it right, as none of the torsos or legs show any skin, so you can repurpose them quite easily. For minifigs that have the standard corpselike pallor, a yellow Sharpie can make them look properly yellow real easily. For any other skintone, you’re largely stuck with what you get out of the box.

@WemWem:
Skintones typically garner such comments, and darker skintones is just a subset of skintones, so not sure it’s fair to compare yellow fans to people who just want Adler to be white. Yellow was a perfect solution until Fox gave Tracy Ullman her own variety show and they made all the Simpsons characters yellow except minorities (including Smithers, in his first appearance). Nobody complains about all the Smurfs being white because they’re all blue.

Now, if they make every minifig a fleshie, then they’d have a real problem, because they’d have to explain why most minifigs are white when most of the world’s population is not, or they’d have to figure out how to at least even out the mix, knowing it would potentially impact sales of one set vs another. For sets, at present, fleshies for licensed IP and real people, and yellow for original IP, seems like the least terrible compromise they can run with.

Gravatar
By in New Zealand,

@GirlWoman said:
"I hate fleshy minifigures. And I don't even understand the rules around it anymore? Literary figures are now skin-colored, too? Why? Why are some historical figures fleshies like Galileo and others not like Shakespeare? I think both should simply be yellow. I mean, that what lego is aught to be right? What is lego's stance on the issue anymore? Is it all about diversity or is the lego figure neutral? In the same vain of recent discussions around waist prints on torsos and that all female-coded minifigures need to wear make-up. I think flesh-colored minifigures look kind of grotesque and dip into the uncanny valley for me."

And why is Irene Adler dark skinned?

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By in Germany,

I find it funny that LEGO this time copied a concept that has been available from alternative manufacturers for years, as obscure and useless as it already might have been with those others. But somehow they must have seen a market for something like this.
LEGO sets are getting weirder and weirder.
I guess skin colours are the least of this concept's problems. But hey, what do I know, maybe this will sell like crazy.

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By in United States,

@WizardOfOss said:
" @PurpleDave said:
"Nobody complains about all the Smurfs being white because they’re all blue."

Not all are blue though....and that has caused it's own bit of controversy: https://i.imgur.com/6a58WwQ.png"


All are blue. The black ones were just the result of being infected by a disease, and the purple ones were a retcon because explaining the thing about black ones gets...awkward.

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By in United States,

@Ridgeheart said:
"Spoiler alert: Irene Adler is a powerful precognitive mutant going by the codename Destiny, and she ends up marrying Mystique. She's also Nightcrawler's real mom, which means he's Destiny's Child.

This is canon, fight me. It doesn't matter, Destiny told me I'd be okay."


Considering Destiny gave Mystique very precise directions on scattering her ashes, and those ashes blew right back in Mystique's face, I'd take anything she said with a grain of salt, as she's a known prankster.

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By in Canada,

@LegoMiniNZ said:
" @GirlWoman said:
"I hate fleshy minifigures. And I don't even understand the rules around it anymore? Literary figures are now skin-colored, too? Why? Why are some historical figures fleshies like Galileo and others not like Shakespeare? I think both should simply be yellow. I mean, that what lego is aught to be right? What is lego's stance on the issue anymore? Is it all about diversity or is the lego figure neutral? In the same vain of recent discussions around waist prints on torsos and that all female-coded minifigures need to wear make-up. I think flesh-colored minifigures look kind of grotesque and dip into the uncanny valley for me."

And why is Irene Adler dark skinned?"


I guess 'cuz why not? In the original stories, she's a foreigner of dubious repute born in New Jersey, who toured continental Europe as an opera singer, and at some point had a scandalous fling with a Bavarian monarch who desperately wants to keep their past together covered up. None of that characterization requires that she be white.

In fact, there were several real-life black opera singers who toured Europe in the late 20th century, in part because they had such promising career opportunities there which were denied to them at many American venues. At least one such singer, Sisieretta Jones, even attested that she experienced less discrimination for her skin color in Europe than she had in America. And if anything, it adds to the story's intrigue if the monarch who sought out Holmes's services was trying to cover up an extramarital tryst not only with a commoner, but a commoner of a different race.

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By in United States,

@Aanchir said:
" @LegoMiniNZ said:
" @GirlWoman said:
"I hate fleshy minifigures. And I don't even understand the rules around it anymore? Literary figures are now skin-colored, too? Why? Why are some historical figures fleshies like Galileo and others not like Shakespeare? I think both should simply be yellow. I mean, that what lego is aught to be right? What is lego's stance on the issue anymore? Is it all about diversity or is the lego figure neutral? In the same vain of recent discussions around waist prints on torsos and that all female-coded minifigures need to wear make-up. I think flesh-colored minifigures look kind of grotesque and dip into the uncanny valley for me."

And why is Irene Adler dark skinned?"


I guess 'cuz why not? In the original stories, she's a foreigner of dubious repute born in New Jersey, who toured continental Europe as an opera singer, and at some point had a scandalous fling with a Bavarian monarch who desperately wants to keep their past together covered up. None of that characterization requires that she be white.

In fact, there were several real-life black opera singers who toured Europe in the late 20th century, in part because they had such promising career opportunities there which were denied to them at many American venues. At least one such singer, Sisieretta Jones, even attested that she experienced less discrimination for her skin color in Europe than she had in America. And if anything, it adds to the story's intrigue if the monarch who sought out Holmes's services was trying to cover up an extramarital tryst not only with a commoner, but a commoner of a different race."


Grasping at straws

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By in United States,

Same size regular paperback books? or hardback?

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By in United States,

@Sandinista said:
" @Aanchir said:
" @LegoMiniNZ said:
" @GirlWoman said:
"I hate fleshy minifigures. And I don't even understand the rules around it anymore? Literary figures are now skin-colored, too? Why? Why are some historical figures fleshies like Galileo and others not like Shakespeare? I think both should simply be yellow. I mean, that what lego is aught to be right? What is lego's stance on the issue anymore? Is it all about diversity or is the lego figure neutral? In the same vain of recent discussions around waist prints on torsos and that all female-coded minifigures need to wear make-up. I think flesh-colored minifigures look kind of grotesque and dip into the uncanny valley for me."

And why is Irene Adler dark skinned?"


I guess 'cuz why not? In the original stories, she's a foreigner of dubious repute born in New Jersey, who toured continental Europe as an opera singer, and at some point had a scandalous fling with a Bavarian monarch who desperately wants to keep their past together covered up. None of that characterization requires that she be white.

In fact, there were several real-life black opera singers who toured Europe in the late 20th century, in part because they had such promising career opportunities there which were denied to them at many American venues. At least one such singer, Sisieretta Jones, even attested that she experienced less discrimination for her skin color in Europe than she had in America. And if anything, it adds to the story's intrigue if the monarch who sought out Holmes's services was trying to cover up an extramarital tryst not only with a commoner, but a commoner of a different race."


Grasping at straws "


Not really.

Gravatar
By in Poland,

@CCC said:
" @emQ said:
"I'd consider this if they were yellow. Why the heck aren't they yellow? Especially since it doesn't seem to be based on a particular item. And Holmes is in the public domain.

This significantly reduces the ability to mix-and-match pieces. I'd strongly consider this if they were yellow. But in flesh-tones, I'm not even wishlisting it."


Which pieces can't you mix and match? The torsos here are perfect in that they have no skin printed on them so anyone wanting yellowskins can switch heads and hands for yellow and you have the set you want. "


Pulling hands out harms the arms. I done this 3 times, and never again.

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

Since we are getting into tedious detail about skin tone, can I just point out that Moriarty is clearly described as clean shaven in the story.

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By in United Kingdom,

Nice idea, shame the buildings don't have any depth but then they wouldn't be book ends.

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By in United Kingdom,

So...
I like this a lot. As someone without the space to store and display modulars, having facades to line a bookshelf with is ideal to me, and it's why I liked the mini houses and buildings GWP's (though unfortunately never got any).
I'm fine with the flesh colour heads, in fact nothing of this bothers me one bit. I consider it to be an attractive model, looks the part, and fits the concept of a book nook perfectly.

If you consider this to be the outpouring of someone that will always just defer to Lego, feel free to reply to this comment which I will happily ignore except for the satisfaction that you have wasted your own time in doing so.

I have never been so bitterly disappointed with a comment thread in my time on Brickset. I'm beginning to wonder, like with any fandom, what exactly it is you like about Lego when you just complain bitterly about it all the time. Again, feel free to enlighten me and waste your time on comments I'll ignore.

I only have one question. We have a Moriarty minifigure, but where's Grytpype-Thynne?

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

Personally, I like both fleshy and yellow heads, and am only bothered if there’s a mismatch between sets I’d like to display together - but not that bothered. It isn’t like it will *stop* me. It’s all Lego.

I do wish the book nook had a back, though, as the clever way of executing that is in my opinion one of the best things about book nooks. That aside I like the little moving bits and the facade and details are all lovely, and the minifig selection is charming. It does feel rather pricy for what you get, but it’s so extremely up my (Victorian) alley I’ll be hard-pressed to resist.

(And yes, I suspect avoiding hassle from the notoriously litigious estate was part of the motivation for official licensing. Most people who pay attention to such things have been waiting for the timer to finally run out with some exasperation.)

@Aanchir said:
" @LegoMiniNZ said:
" @GirlWoman said:
"I hate fleshy minifigures. And I don't even understand the rules around it anymore? Literary figures are now skin-colored, too? Why? Why are some historical figures fleshies like Galileo and others not like Shakespeare? I think both should simply be yellow. I mean, that what lego is aught to be right? What is lego's stance on the issue anymore? Is it all about diversity or is the lego figure neutral? In the same vain of recent discussions around waist prints on torsos and that all female-coded minifigures need to wear make-up. I think flesh-colored minifigures look kind of grotesque and dip into the uncanny valley for me."

And why is Irene Adler dark skinned?"


I guess 'cuz why not? In the original stories, she's a foreigner of dubious repute born in New Jersey, who toured continental Europe as an opera singer, and at some point had a scandalous fling with a Bavarian monarch who desperately wants to keep their past together covered up. None of that characterization requires that she be white.

In fact, there were several real-life black opera singers who toured Europe in the late 20th century, in part because they had such promising career opportunities there which were denied to them at many American venues. At least one such singer, Sisieretta Jones, even attested that she experienced less discrimination for her skin color in Europe than she had in America. And if anything, it adds to the story's intrigue if the monarch who sought out Holmes's services was trying to cover up an extramarital tryst not only with a commoner, but a commoner of a different race."


Well-reasoned.

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By in United States,

@Jackthenipper said:
"Since we are getting into tedious detail about skin tone, can I just point out that Moriarty is clearly described as clean shaven in the story."

He's also described as "a genius, a philosopher, an abstract thinker." If you'd shown me that minifig out of context and asked to to describe what kind of character it represented, I would not have chosen those words.

Gravatar
By in Germany,

I really like this idea. I think different themes for this kind of thing would convince me to buy one.

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By in Poland,

To be honest I thought there will be two hinges, so kind of three buildings and when folded middle green facade would be back of "book". It would look also cool.

I have problem with figures. I googled "Irene Adler" and was like "och, that one!". Of course I remember that pretty character in movies/tv series but minifigure doesn't look close to any of them! I know set is not based on tv series/movie but still, what is a point of changing character?
Scherlock is main character so he could have printed legs to look more elegant.

Beside that idea is good.

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By in Germany,

@Aanchir said:
" @LegoMiniNZ said:
" @GirlWoman said:
"I hate fleshy minifigures. And I don't even understand the rules around it anymore? Literary figures are now skin-colored, too? Why? Why are some historical figures fleshies like Galileo and others not like Shakespeare? I think both should simply be yellow. I mean, that what lego is aught to be right? What is lego's stance on the issue anymore? Is it all about diversity or is the lego figure neutral? In the same vain of recent discussions around waist prints on torsos and that all female-coded minifigures need to wear make-up. I think flesh-colored minifigures look kind of grotesque and dip into the uncanny valley for me."

And why is Irene Adler dark skinned?"


I guess 'cuz why not? In the original stories, she's a foreigner of dubious repute born in New Jersey, who toured continental Europe as an opera singer, and at some point had a scandalous fling with a Bavarian monarch who desperately wants to keep their past together covered up. None of that characterization requires that she be white.

In fact, there were several real-life black opera singers who toured Europe in the late 20th century, in part because they had such promising career opportunities there which were denied to them at many American venues. At least one such singer, Sisieretta Jones, even attested that she experienced less discrimination for her skin color in Europe than she had in America. And if anything, it adds to the story's intrigue if the monarch who sought out Holmes's services was trying to cover up an extramarital tryst not only with a commoner, but a commoner of a different race."


Don't scare them with facts and reality

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By in United States,

@yellowcastle said:
"
Not to belabor the point, but I think the E is for equity. :o)
"


No. If so, then the orange German and Afrikaner bigot (is that redundant?) wouldn't have a problem with it. What they are against is equality even though that is the foundation on which the United States was formed.

Gravatar
By in Belgium,

@IgelCampus said:
[[ @Adrienn said:
[[ @IgelCampus said:
[[For example the 42128 was so horrible that I started to look for the mold mark on each part before putting it into place]]

I do that all the time: making sure those ugly marks aren't visible. None of my childhood (80's sets) have that problem: they appear to be much less visible or in places you eventually wont see.]]]]

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By in United States,

@sotwuser said:
" @yellowcastle said:
"
Not to belabor the point, but I think the E is for equity. :o)
"


No. If so, then the orange German and Afrikaner bigot (is that redundant?) wouldn't have a problem with it. What they are against is equality even though that is the foundation on which the United States was formed.

"


You speak as though those two had any kind of consistent principles.

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By in United States,

@Briczk said:
"To be honest I thought there will be two hinges, so kind of three buildings and when folded middle green facade would be back of "book". It would look also cool."

Interesting. I spotted two hinges at the top, but apparently one is non-functional, and only there to maintain symmetry in the unfolded building.

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By in United Kingdom,

If that green facade was the 'back' when folded - i may have been interested but sadly it isn't. This is then NOT a book nook unfortunatley.

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By in United States,

I LOVE SHERLOCK HOLMES. Absolutely getting this.

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By in United States,

@hoarder40 said:
"If that green facade was the 'back' when folded - I may have been interested but sadly it isn't. This is then NOT a book nook unfortunately."

I was thinking they could've had the facade detach, not hinged, two halves left and right, and have another build of say like the city-scape, flat mosaic, showing more of a vanishing point (buildings, street extending, etc) to be the 'back'. Which would attach to both halves.
But of course, the price would've increased.

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By in United States,

Beautiful. I love all the books (never watched the show or the movie) and this looks really appealing to me. In fact it makes me want to reread the books again. My only complaint is with Holmes and Moriarty's faces. Especially Holmes, I just don't see any of his personality in that face, and he really should have had sideburns. It really is a shame that they did not create a new face for the MAIN PROTAGANIST.

Gravatar
By in Brazil,

Moriarty's minifig is terrible. The skin color, the cartoonish face, the clothes he's wearing... Everything is wrong about him, not only according to the books, but he also doesn't mix with the other minifigs in this exact same set!

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By in Poland,

@PurpleDave said:
" @Briczk said:
"To be honest I thought there will be two hinges, so kind of three buildings and when folded middle green facade would be back of "book". It would look also cool."

Interesting. I spotted two hinges at the top, but apparently one is non-functional, and only there to maintain symmetry in the unfolded building."


Good eye! Yes, left one is fake. Now I see also that there are two knobs at roof of green building also for symmetry because only one works with door.

Also my idea with back wall would complicate floor and for sure Lego wanted streets to be stable.

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By in United States,

@LotRBrickfan196 said:
"Beautiful. I love all the books (never watched the show or the movie)..."

"The" book? "The" movie? I can call multiple examples of both to my mind without even doing any research.

Gravatar
By in Netherlands,

Huge Holmes fan, this does not sit well with me... Sorry but I just don't like it... and certainly not at that price :(

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By in United Kingdom,

@GirlWoman said:
" @Aanchir said:
" @LegoMiniNZ said:
" @GirlWoman said:
"I hate fleshy minifigures. And I don't even understand the rules around it anymore? Literary figures are now skin-colored, too? Why? Why are some historical figures fleshies like Galileo and others not like Shakespeare? I think both should simply be yellow. I mean, that what lego is aught to be right? What is lego's stance on the issue anymore? Is it all about diversity or is the lego figure neutral? In the same vain of recent discussions around waist prints on torsos and that all female-coded minifigures need to wear make-up. I think flesh-colored minifigures look kind of grotesque and dip into the uncanny valley for me."

And why is Irene Adler dark skinned?"


I guess 'cuz why not? In the original stories, she's a foreigner of dubious repute born in New Jersey, who toured continental Europe as an opera singer, and at some point had a scandalous fling with a Bavarian monarch who desperately wants to keep their past together covered up. None of that characterization requires that she be white.

In fact, there were several real-life black opera singers who toured Europe in the late 20th century, in part because they had such promising career opportunities there which were denied to them at many American venues. At least one such singer, Sisieretta Jones, even attested that she experienced less discrimination for her skin color in Europe than she had in America. And if anything, it adds to the story's intrigue if the monarch who sought out Holmes's services was trying to cover up an extramarital tryst not only with a commoner, but a commoner of a different race."


Don't scare them with facts and reality"


Irene Adler has appeared in drawings created by Sidney Pagent for Sherlock Holmes stories as far back as 1891. In those drawings (printed as part of the publications of the stories, hence considered ‘canon’) Irene Adler looks VERY white.
It’s interesting that the proverbial accusations of ‘White Washing’ when a Caucasian person portrays a character of a different ethnicity isn’t reflected with the same vigour when it’s the other way around!!!!

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

@alLEGOry_HJB2810 said:
" @Tuzi said:
" @GirlWoman said:
"I hate fleshy minifigures. And I don't even understand the rules around it anymore? Literary figures are now skin-colored, too? Why? Why are some historical figures fleshies like Galileo and others not like Shakespeare? I think both should simply be yellow. I mean, that what lego is aught to be right? What is lego's stance on the issue anymore? Is it all about diversity or is the lego figure neutral? In the same vain of recent discussions around waist prints on torsos and that all female-coded minifigures need to wear make-up. I think flesh-colored minifigures look kind of grotesque and dip into the uncanny valley for me."

Then just replace the fleshy parts with yellow parts. It's LEGO, you can just do that."


See, I used to share @GirlWoman 's opinion but guess what converted me to fleshies? The D&D minifig series. It was the first one that I collected all of (plus spares) and I am soo happy I did- it's awesome. I've realised that the flesh tone really adds to the realism of a scene since it doesn't mess with the colour scheme and you can give your characters a bit more of a 'real' feel. Now I don't have anything against yellow skin tone minifigs, I probably use it more tbh since I have about 5 times as many yellow skin minifigs as fleshies, but if I could magically change all my yellow heads to more realistic coloured heads, I would. I don't have opinions of what should be yellow and what should be fleshy other than movie characters being skin-tone, but I do think that they should make sets with skin-tone minifigs the same value as yellow minifigs rather than keeping fleshies exclusive to overpriced HP and SW sets."


On this note, I would like to acknowledge the inclusion of diversity in this interpretation of Irene Adler. I am not familiar enough with the Sherlock Holmes fandom to say whether or not this is a new idea. But if it is, kudos to Lego for being first.

Frankly, I don't consider Alder to be a very interesting fictional character. But if I buy this set, that minifigure is definitely getting re-christened an OG character, because I love it!

Gravatar
By in United States,

@obiron17 said:
"Irene Adler has appeared in drawings created by Sidney Pagent for Sherlock Holmes stories as far back as 1891. In those drawings (printed as part of the publications of the stories, hence considered ‘canon’) Irene Adler looks VERY white.
It’s interesting that the proverbial accusations of ‘White Washing’ when a Caucasian person portrays a character of a different ethnicity isn’t reflected with the same vigour when it’s the other way around!!!! "


The problem stems from the fact that most characters are written white to begin with. When they aren't written as anything, they are assumed to be white. And when they aren't written white, they have historically been more likely to be criminals.

Some older stories have a long history of being reimagined. I've watched a stage performance of Macbeth that was set in 1990's South Africa, The Lion King is Hamlet, and West Side Story is Romeo & Juliet. Sherlock Holmes is not new to this game, either. I've got Young Sherlock Holmes on DVD, and Elementary cast Lucy Liu as Dr. Joan Watson, with the setting moved to modern day NYC. At some point, a story has been told often enough that it gets boring to keep playing it straight, so people look for ways to start changing things up, either because the idea of a new setting seems cool, or because they want to use the story as a vehicle for social commentary.

The problem is that some attempts are more successful than others, and some are more welcome than others. Recently, some high-profile actresses have come out against the idea of recasting James Bond as a woman, because they would rather see better original roles being written for women instead of just coopting successful male roles. I haven't seen the same sentiment expressed regarding race changes, but those also get awkward. A few literary classics have been reimagined with black casts, but it's never Treasure Island or A Christmas Carol. It's always The Wizard of Oz or Annie, where everybody (except Daddy Warbucks) is dirt poor. That sort of recasting appears to be broadly accepted by society (except me).

The reason why "whitewashed" casting gets so much grief is that there aren't a lot of minority roles available to begin with, and most of those aren't very good. So taking a minority role, especially a prominent one, and recasting it with a white actor, carries a lot more significance than doing the same for one of the abundance of white roles. Even so, it's still more frequently supporting cast that this happens with, rather than main characters. Or it's non-human characters, where race isn't much of an issue. DC did this rather adeptly with their Justice League/Unlimited series. They took the original Justice League roster and swapped out Hal Jordan for John Stewart (a character who already existed), and did the same for Hawkman with Hawkgirl (another character who already existed). Then they cast Martian Manhunter with a black actor. So, in a main cast of seven, they ended up with three white men, two white women, one black man, and one green man who would shapeshift into a black man when he wanted to pass for human. And all that was accomplished without having to fundamentally change any of the characters involved.

Compare that to Doctor Strange, where they have stated that they didn't want to play into the tired old trope of the wizened old Asian mentor, so they made the Ancient One a younger woman...and it might not have backfired so spectacularly if they hadn't cast a white actress in that role. To get around the trope, they had to avoid any AAPI actresses, which basically would have left them with Latina or African, neither of which would have been likely to draw as much criticism.

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@BrickAnomiesaid:"On this note, I would like to acknowledge the inclusion of diversity in this interpretation of Irene Adler. I am not familiar enough with the Sherlock Holmes fandom to say whether or not this is a new idea. But if it is, kudos to Lego for being first."

I can't speak for Irene Adler, but the CBS series Watson has black actors for John Watson and his wife Mary Morstan, who is another character from the books.

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