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Talk:Robert F. Schulkers

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I removed the following text as it was unsourced, among other things. It is described as "one individual's observations", but does not state who. Wikipedia is not a place for people to insert their own opinions.

The stories bear a number of similarities to Sherlock Holmes plot lines and characterization. The similarity in the two detective's names seems hardly coincidental along with a compulsion (Seckatary's or Dr. Watson's) to record and later transmit the adventures to the public. The Hawkin's series has a physician, Dr. Watters who is a sometimes confidant; a police inspector counterpart to Lestrade, in the name of Jeckerson, who is seemingly (occasionally) unable to solve crimes by himself; and one most masterful villain, in the person of Stoner's boy who falls to his death into rapidly moving water (in Kentucky not Switzerland like Holmes and Moriarity), disappears, and returns in a subsequent adventure. Seckatary has few responsibilities and less homework and so can dedicate himself full time to his consultative detective work.