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Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's The Hound of the Baskervilles was first serialized in The Strand magazine between August 1901 and April 1902. This masterpiece, which Umberto Eco refers to in The Name of the Rose with the unforgettable protagonist William of Baskerville, who resembles Holmes both with his description and reasoning ability, has entered the medical literature with the term "Baskerville effect", which describes heart attacks that result in death due to sudden and severe fear.
We are in Dartmoor, England. We meet the legend of a cursed family that is revived with the sudden death of the noble Charles Baskerville. The story, which begins with a manuscript dated 1742 and develops with Watson's reports from the crime scene, preserves its mystery until the last moment with its eerie atmosphere, a terrifying wild hound, a deserted steppe, a relentless swamp and a gloomy mansion environment.