The New Adventures Of Sherlock Holmes The Purloined Ruby
# The Purloined Ruby
Picture yourself settling into your favorite chair on a Tuesday evening, the dial tuned to that familiar frequency where mystery awaits. In *The Purloined Ruby*, the incomparable Basil Rathbone returns as Sherlock Holmes, his clipped British accent cutting through the static like a knife through fog, while Nigel Bruce's bumbling Dr. Watson stumbles faithfully at his side. A precious ruby has vanished from a locked study—a theft so cunningly executed that Scotland Yard's finest are utterly baffled. But Holmes sees what others cannot. As the minutes tick away and suspects circle like vultures, you'll find yourself leaning closer to the speaker, trying to solve the puzzle before the great detective reveals his startling conclusion. The sound design crackles with authentic period detail: the hiss of gas lamps, the distant clatter of London hansom cabs, the ominous silence of a crime scene.
This episode represents the golden age of radio drama, when *The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes* commanded millions of listeners across North America. Rathbone, already famous from the recent Hollywood films, brought unprecedented prestige to the medium, proving that radio could deliver sophisticated entertainment to families and intellectuals alike. Produced with meticulous attention to Conan Doyle's source material yet crafted specifically for the ear rather than the eye, these broadcasts created an entirely new interpretation of the world's greatest detective—one heard, imagined, and cherished by Depression and wartime audiences hungry for intelligent escapism.
Step back into 1940s America and experience radio as it was meant to be heard. *The Purloined Ruby* awaits—a masterclass in mystery, perfectly preserved for your listening pleasure.