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The Lamorna Wink
  

The Lamorna Wink (Hardcover)

by Martha Grimes (Author) "Still wearing his cabby's cap-he ought to put it in his act, this cap, because it looked so unlike what a magician would wear-Johnny was..." (more)
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (53 customer reviews)

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From Amazon.com

Fans of Martha Grimes will know that the Lamorna Wink must be a British pub, and one to which Superintendent Richard Jury or his aristocratic sidekick Melrose Plant can be counted on to repair in the process of solving a mystery or two. This time, with Jury off in Ireland, Plant takes the starring role. His vacation in picturesque Bletchley on the Cornwall coast is very nearly ruined by the coincidental appearance of his dreaded Aunt Agatha. Ironically, however, he is drawn to the plight of a young man, Johnny Wells, whose favorite aunt has disappeared suddenly without trace. In spite of Agatha, Plant decides to lease a house owned by an American millionaire whose two grandchildren died tragically on the beach a few years before. Within a day or so, a new dead body is found in neighboring Lamorna: that of Sada Colthorp, a young woman who had lived in the area but left to dabble in porn movies. Plant and divisional police commander Brian Macalvie (Help the Poor Struggler) believes there's a link between Colthorp and the missing Chris Wells. When the pieces start to come together (and a fast string of violence ensues), Jury makes a token appearance to tie up the remaining loose ends. But the day really belongs to Plant, who is becoming much more than an accidental detective, and to Macalvie, a character with an appeal that may eclipse even Jury's.

As always, Grimes provides comic relief at the expense of a tight plot by checking in with the myriad other characters who populate Plant's Long Piddleton and Jury's London. The impatient reader may wonder when, if ever, Plant and friends will cease their juvenile heckling of Vivian Rivington's Italian count. The final explanation of the children's deaths, however, will leave the most stoic mystery fan feeling distinctly queasy. That Grimes can so effectively amuse, shock, intrigue, and even irritate after 16 books bodes well for the continuing life of the series. --Barrie Trinkle --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.



From Publishers Weekly

In her 16th Richard Jury mystery, Grimes delays the great man's appearance until late in the game, but the novel is nonetheless as consuming as its 15 predecessors (most recently, The Stargazey, 1998). Here, Jury's pal Melrose Plant leases Seabourne, a lovely oceanside house in Cornwall, where four years earlier two children died from an inexplicable fall down a flight of stone steps. Their parents fled to London; their grandfather, who owns Seabourne, refitted a local stately home into a hospice/nursing home, where he now lives. Melrose befriends Johnny Wells, a vivacious teenager with ambitions to become a magician, who lives with his Aunt Chris. When Chris vanishes and another woman, whom Chris detested, is found dead in neighboring Lamorna, Melrose calls Div. Comdr. Brian Macalvie of the Devon and Cornwall Police Department, whom Plant and Jury first met as a hot-tempered constable in Help the Poor Struggler. As two more murders follow, Melrose and Macalvie realize they are investigating two different cases, with vengeance the motive for one, the other connected to a child pornography ring. At last, Jury arrives fresh from a case in Northern Ireland and helps solve the crimes, past and present, although it is the hypochondriac Sergeant Wiggins (now hooked on the Bromo Seltzer he discovered in Baltimore in The Horse You Came In On, 1993), whose voluminous note taking leads to the linchpin clue. In addition to richly portrayed characters and stunningly described settings, the tangled plot is strewn with a host of genuine clues, as well as red herrings that beguile as effectively as they mislead. Grimes fans will be particularly intrigued as Melrose contemplates his childhood, revealing more about his complex personality than ever before. Mystery Guild main selection; Literary Guild and Doubleday Book Club alternates; 12-city author tour. (Oct.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Still wearing his cabby's cap-he ought to put it in his act, this cap, because it looked so unlike what a magician would wear-Johnny was sitting at the gaming table palming cards. Read the first page
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53 évaluations
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3.3étoiles sur 5 (53 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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1 internautes sur 1 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile :
5.0étoiles sur 5 one of the best, Fév 18 2004
Par "rachkmc" (toronto, canada) - Voir tous mes commentaires
As much as I love Jury, it's always fun to have more Melrose dosage.
Unlike your typical Detective/Sidekick formula, Melrose often takes center stage in the books, proving himself not only Jury's equal but a staple to the tales. A truly abhorrent murder involving two children has Melrose's seemingly Agatha-free Cornwall vacation set awry. Characters like Brian Malcalvie and amateur magician Johnny Wells are essential to the tale, giving Lord Ardry lots of fun dialogue and allowing for personal insights of our favourite Old-Peculiar Drinking, Rimbaud Reading, Lou Reed-listening Earl than we have ever had before. ( Why DID he give up those bloody titles ?!!)

Worth a re-read for those of you who have already partaken. And for the uninitiated, I envy you, for you have not met one of the greatest pairings in crime fiction yet.

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1 internautes sur 1 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile :
4.0étoiles sur 5 Disturbing Depths, Avril 3 2002
Par Martha E. Nelson (Watertown, Wisconsin) - Voir tous mes commentaires
I am reading my way through Martha Grimes' Richard Jury mysteries, and it is very interesting to see her develop her characters and plots. The Lamorna Wink is a long trip away from such early books as The Dirty Duck and The Old Fox Deceiv'd. It follows a recent trend in Grimes' work to have complex supporting characters and multiple plots and also a general sense of unsettled melancholy that is probably annoying if you don't like her characters, and addictive if you do.

This is definitely Melrose Plant's story, although he is spirited away back to Long Pid just as things get wrapped up. The surprise here is that we become privy to a lot more detail about the parents and early life of Melrose than ever before, and that is interesting. We find out new depths to Brian Macalvie also.

A lot of people have commented on what might be called the horrifying or unsavory elements of the plot of this novel. I certainly agree that there are horrible things that happen here, but I would agree with one reviewer who says that horrible things do happen in this world. I was more concerned because the different stands of the story didn't always fit together. Motives seemed to be stretched at times.

I certainly won't give up on Martha Grimes anytime soon.

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1 internautes sur 1 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile :
5.0étoiles sur 5 Plant me at his side any day!!, Aoû 9 2001
Par J. Cunningham "jillalicehannah" (Boston, MA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
Whenever I travel to the English countryside I, ridiculously enough, look at some of the people and wonder how much they are likened to the characters in a Richard Jury novel. How I would love to go to "Long Pid" and have a G&T with Viv-Viv, Marshall, Melrose and, of course, Richard Jury. They have become some of my most favored characters as Martha Grimes has a gift for making them seem so real. This time the former Lord Ardry gets to shine in the absence of his Scotland Yard friend, and he does it brilliantly. A Lord taking the time to chum with Johnny Wells is a bit hard to believe unless we know his background. This case has more twists than Chubby Checker, but Melrose is determined to stick in there, much to the chagrin of his obnoxious aunt. The sub-plots can take us down roads we weren't expecting, forgetting the most immediate crime(s). But Plant gets the job done swimmingly, and Jury's appearance is almost a formality at the end. Is this a hint that there might be a series of Melrose Plant novels coming up? All the characters interact so well I don't believe that Jury would be offended, more likely helpful in a governmental aspect in contrast to Plant's help in an aristocratic way. Don't miss this one...I can't wait to get to Cornwall and have tea and pastries soon!
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Commentaires client les plus récents

4.0étoiles sur 5 Grimes' most emotional book yet
Read the reviews for the gist of the plot. Yes, the book has more than one death (past and present) and the usual grouping of charming characters, but if you think this book is... Read more
Publié il y a 12 mois par A Canadian Fan

4.0étoiles sur 5 The Uninvited
A Martha Grimes mystery is a pleasure to read for reason of her character Richard Jury. One casts one's mind over other with whom a female author identifies such as Lord Peter... Read more
Publié le Juil 26 2003 par Mary E. Sibley

2.0étoiles sur 5 Too Horrible to Read for Fun
Those were the words my husband used when I told him the plot of this mystery. I have really enjoyed Martha Grimes' novels, and was on my way to really enjoying this one when I... Read more
Publié le Oct. 7 2002 par swb0202

4.0étoiles sur 5 Disturbing last scene mars story.Has less Jury, more Plant.
~-~
I'm writing this review as a slightly disappointed, fanatic fan of the Superintendent Jury and Melrose Plant mystery series. Read more
Publié le Mai 30 2002 par lynkfri13

1.0étoiles sur 5 Has Ms. Grimes ever actually been to England?
I ask because no-one in England misspells "Provo", "Weetabix", or says "nine-fifty" when they mean ten-to-ten; there were lots more Americanisms, but... Read more
Publié le Sep 7 2001

3.0étoiles sur 5 Too horrific; too little outrage
I'm a lover of Grimes' Jury series and had hiked extensively in Cornwall before reading the book. Naturally I was thrilled to find this book about all the fascinating little... Read more
Publié le Aoû 24 2001 par evelyn johnston

3.0étoiles sur 5 Too horrific; too little outrage
I'm a lover of Grimes' Jury series and had hiked extensively in Cornwall before reading the book. Naturally I was thrilled to find this book about all the fascinating little... Read more
Publié le Aoû 24 2001 par evelyn johnston

4.0étoiles sur 5 Continued brilliance
Martha Grimes has produced another well written novel. I liked the fact that she she wrote a Richard Jury novel without her featured detective (for the most part). Read more
Publié le Aoû 15 2001 par Kevin Logar

1.0étoiles sur 5 What's up with Marha Grimes?
I guess one could say she's "evolving".

Her most recent works do not fall under the classification -"cozy". Which is fine. Read more

Publié le Aoû 11 2001 par karakendall

5.0étoiles sur 5 Plant me at his side any day!!
Whenever I travel to the English countryside I, ridiculously enough, look at some of the people and wonder how much they are likened to the characters in a Richard Jury novel... Read more
Publié le Aoû 9 2001 par J. Cunningham

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