Enola Holmes: 10 Things From The Books Not Included In The Film
4. The Professional Women’s Club, Enola's Home Base
One of the themes of both the film and the books is Enola's independence, and her ability to be self-sufficient while also knowing she doesn't necessarily need to be alone to succeed on her own merit. This is best represented by her eventual settlement in London's Professional Women's Club, a place she can live safely without needing to rely on her brothers.
Though not nearly as grisly or dark as the other entries on this list, the Professional Women's Club is notable not only in the opportunity it gives Enola to forge her own path, but the fact that she's able to afford rooming there. This is in part due to her earnings from being hired to investigate cases in secret, as well as the rent she's able to collect from a building she owns by the end of the series, shows an impressive amount of maturity and self-sufficiency that would be admirable coming from a full-grown adult, let alone the 15-year old Enola is by the end of the last book.
Maybe not as visually impressive as a secret tea-room martial arts club, but just as, if not more so, important, to an independent young woman.