It’s 1901. Author Arthur Conan Doyle is on holiday when he first hears whispers of a chilling local legend – spectral hounds said to tear across the wilds of Dartmoor under cover of darkness.
A tale of an evil squire. A cursed family. And a pack of demonic dogs haunting the moors.
We’re delving into the story of how this eerie West Country folklore inspired one of the greatest gothic thrillers of all time: The Hound of the Baskervilles – and why its creation posed a huge dilemma for Doyle and his most famous character, Sherlock Holmes.

